Issue 41, 2020

How heat controls fracture: the thermodynamics of creeping and avalanching cracks

Abstract

While of paramount importance in material science, the dynamics of cracks still lacks a complete physical explanation. The transition from their slow creep behavior to a fast propagation regime is a notable key, as it leads to full material failure if the size of a fast avalanche reaches that of the system. We here show that a simple thermodynamics approach can actually account for such complex crack dynamics, and in particular for the non-monotonic force–velocity curves commonly observed in mechanical tests on various materials. We consider a thermally activated failure process that is coupled with the production and the diffusion of heat at the fracture tip. In this framework, the rise in temperature only affects the sub-critical crack dynamics and not the mechanical properties of the material. We show that this description can quantitatively reproduce the rupture of two different polymeric materials (namely, the mode I opening of polymethylmethacrylate (PMMA) plates, and the peeling of pressure sensitive adhesive (PSA) tapes), from the very slow to the very fast fracturing regimes, over seven to nine decades of crack propagation velocities. In particular, the fastest regime is obtained with an increase of temperature of thousands of Kelvins, on the molecular scale around the crack tip. Although surprising, such an extreme temperature is actually consistent with different experimental observations that accompany the fast propagation of cracks, namely, fractoluminescence (i.e., the emission of visible light during rupture) and a complex morphology of post-mortem fracture surfaces, which could be due to the sublimation of bubbles.

Graphical abstract: How heat controls fracture: the thermodynamics of creeping and avalanching cracks

Supplementary files

Article information

Article type
Paper
Submitted
08 Jun 2020
Accepted
27 Jul 2020
First published
28 Sep 2020
This article is Open Access
Creative Commons BY-NC license

Soft Matter, 2020,16, 9590-9602

How heat controls fracture: the thermodynamics of creeping and avalanching cracks

T. Vincent-Dospital, R. Toussaint, S. Santucci, L. Vanel, D. Bonamy, L. Hattali, A. Cochard, E. G. Flekkøy and K. J. Måløy, Soft Matter, 2020, 16, 9590 DOI: 10.1039/D0SM01062F

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