76 research outputs found

    Wave mitigation in ordered networks of granular chains

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    We study the propagation of stress waves through ordered 2D networks of granular chains. The quasi-particle continuum theory employed captures the acoustic pulse splitting, bending, and recombination through the network and is used to derive its effective acoustic properties. The strong wave mitigation properties of the network predicted theoretically are confirmed through both numerical simulations and experimental tests. In particular, the leading pulse amplitude propagating through the system is shown to decay exponentially with the propagation distance and the spatial structure of the transmitted wave shows an exponential localization along the direction of the incident wave. The length scales that characterized these exponential decays are studied and determined as a function of the geometrical properties of the network. These results open avenues for the design of efficient impact mitigating structures and provide new insights into the mechanisms of wave propagation in granular matter.Comment: submitted to Journal of the Mechanics and Physics of Solid

    From microstructural features to effective toughness in disordered brittle solids

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    The relevant parameters at the microstructure scale that govern the macroscopic toughness of disordered brittle materials are investigated theoretically. We focus on planar crack propagation and describe the front evolution as the propagation of a long-range elastic line within a plane with random distribution of toughness. Our study reveals two regimes: in the collective pinning regime, the macroscopic toughness can be expressed as a function of a few parameters only, namely the average and the standard deviation of the local toughness distribution and the correlation lengths of the heterogeneous toughness field; in the individual pinning regime, the passage from micro to macroscale is more subtle and the full distribution of local toughness is required to be predictive. Beyond the failure of brittle solids, our findings illustrate the complex filtering process of microscale quantities towards the larger scales into play in a broad range of systems governed by the propagation of an elastic interface in a disordered medium.Comment: 7 pages, 4 figure

    Transient damage spreading and anomalous scaling in mortar crack surfaces

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    The scaling properties of a post-mortem mortar crack surface are investigated. The root mean square of the height fluctuations is found to obey anomalous scaling properties, but with three exponents, two of them characterizing the local roughness (zeta~=0.79 and zetae~=0.41) and the third one driving the global roughness (zetag~=1.60). The critical exponent zeta~=0.79 is conjectured to reflect damage screening occurring for length scales smaller than the process zone size, while the exponent zetae~=0.41 characterizes roughness at larger length scales, i.e., at length scales where the material can be considered as linear elastic. Finally, we argue that the global roughness exponent could be material dependent contrary to both local roughness exponents (zeta~=0.8 and zetae~=0.4) which can be considered as universal

    Low self-affine exponents of fracture surfaces of glass ceramics

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    The geometry of post mortem rough fracture surfaces of porous glass ceramics made of sintered glass beads is shown experimentally to be self-affine with an exponent zeta=0.40 (0.04) remarkably lower than the 'universal' value zeta=0.8 frequently measured for many materials. This low value of zeta is similar to that found for sandstone samples of similar micro structure and is also practically independent on the porosity phi in the range investigated (3% < phi < 26%) as well as on the bead diameter d and of the crack growth velocity. In contrast, the roughness amplitude normalized by d increases linearly with phi while it is still independent, within experimental error, of d and of the crack propagation velocity. An interpretation of this variation is suggested in terms of a transition from transgranular to intergranular fracture propagation with no influence, however, on the exponent zeta.Comment: 4 page

    LOW VELOCITY SURFACE FRACTURE PATTERNS IN BRITTLE MATERIAL: A NEWLY EVIDENCED MECHANICAL INSTABILITY

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    International audienceThe occurrence of various instabilities at very high speed is well known to occur in brittle fracture and significant advances have recently been obtained in the understanding of their origin. On the other hand, low speed brittle crack propagation under pure tension loading (mode I) is usually thought to yield smooth crack surfaces. The experimental investigation reported here questions this statement. Steady cracks were driven in brittle glassy polymers (PolyMethyl Methacrylate - PMMA) using a wedge-splitting geometry over a wide range of low velocities (10-9- 10-1 m/s). Three distinct patterns can be observed on the post-mortem fracture surfaces as crack velocity decreases: perfectly smooth at the highest speed, regularly fragmented at intermediate speed and macroscopically rough at the lowest speed. The transition between the two latter is reminiscent of chaotic transition

    Nanoscale damage during fracture in silica glass

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    We report here atomic force microscopy experiments designed to uncover the nature of failure mechanisms occuring within the process zone at the tip of a crack propagating into a silica glass specimen under stress corrosion. The crack propagates through the growth and coalescence of nanoscale damage spots. This cavitation process is shown to be the key mechanism responsible for damage spreading within the process zone. The possible origin of the nucleation of cavities, as well as the implications on the selection of both the cavity size at coalescence and the process zone extension are finally discussed.Comment: 12 page
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