Statistical Physics of Rupture in Heterogeneous Media
D. Sornette (UCLA, CNRS-Univ. Nice)

TL;DR
This paper reviews recent statistical physics approaches to understanding rupture and fracture in heterogeneous materials, highlighting the complexity and current gaps in predicting material failure.
Contribution
It provides a comprehensive review of recent advances in applying statistical physics to rupture phenomena in heterogeneous media.
Findings
Identification of key statistical physics models for rupture
Insights into scale hierarchies affecting failure
Highlighting gaps in predictive methods
Abstract
The damage and fracture of materials are technologically of enormous interest due to their economic and human cost. They cover a wide range of phenomena like e.g. cracking of glass, aging of concrete, the failure of fiber networks in the formation of paper and the breaking of a metal bar subject to an external load. Failure of composite systems is of utmost importance in naval, aeronautics and space industry. By the term composite, we refer to materials with heterogeneous microscopic structures and also to assemblages of macroscopic elements forming a super-structure. Chemical and nuclear plants suffer from cracking due to corrosion either of chemical or radioactive origin, aided by thermal and/or mechanical stress. Despite the large amount of experimental data and the considerable effort that has been undertaken by material scientists, many questions about fracture have not been…
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