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Nonlinear Focusing in Dynamic Crack Fronts and the Microbranching Transition.

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Cracks in brittle materials produce two types of generic surface structures: facets at low velocities and microbranches at higher ones. Here we observe a transition from faceting to microbranching in… Click to show full abstract

Cracks in brittle materials produce two types of generic surface structures: facets at low velocities and microbranches at higher ones. Here we observe a transition from faceting to microbranching in polyacrylamide gels that is characterized by nonlinear dynamic localization of crack fronts. To better understand this process we derive a first-principles nonlinear equation of motion for crack fronts in the context of scalar elasticity. Its solution shows that nonlinear focusing coupled to rate dependence of dissipation governs the transition to microbranching.

Keywords: dynamic crack; transition; crack fronts; nonlinear focusing; focusing dynamic

Journal Title: Physical review letters
Year Published: 2017

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