2019
DOI: 10.1016/j.jmps.2019.01.010
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Crack kinking in a variational phase-field model of brittle fracture with strongly anisotropic surface energy

Abstract: In strongly anisotropic materials the orientation-dependent fracture surface energy is a non-convex function of the crack angle. In this context, the classical Griffith model becomes ill-posed and requires a regularization. We revisit the crack kinking problem in materials with strongly anisotropic surface energies by using a variational phase-field model. The model includes in the energy functional a quadratic term on the second gradient of the phase-field. This term has a regularizing effect, energetically p… Show more

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Cited by 66 publications
(50 citation statements)
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References 78 publications
(147 reference statements)
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“…To introduce such a more general anisotropy in the phase‐field approach to brittle fracture, higher order tensors and higher order derivatives of the phase‐field variable must be included 20 . To make the variational approach to brittle fracture also amenable to large‐scale computations under such requirements, the energy functional of Equation (2), which is applicable to a discrete crack, is replaced by the functional: 23 false(u,cfalse)=Ωa(c)𝒲(u)dΩΓtu·t^dΓ+𝒢0βcΩfalse(w(c)+c42c:C:2cfalse)dΩ, where a ( c ) = (1 − c ) 2 is a degradation function, w ( c ) = 9 c is a monotonically increasing function which represents the energy dissipation per unit volume, and β=401w(c)dc=96/5 is a normalization parameter. ∇ 2 c is a Hessian, that is, (2c)ij=2cxixj and C is a positive‐definite fourth‐order tensor with the same symmetries as the linear elastic stiffness tensor 29 .…”
Section: Phase‐field Approximations Of Anisotropic Fracturementioning
confidence: 99%
See 3 more Smart Citations
“…To introduce such a more general anisotropy in the phase‐field approach to brittle fracture, higher order tensors and higher order derivatives of the phase‐field variable must be included 20 . To make the variational approach to brittle fracture also amenable to large‐scale computations under such requirements, the energy functional of Equation (2), which is applicable to a discrete crack, is replaced by the functional: 23 false(u,cfalse)=Ωa(c)𝒲(u)dΩΓtu·t^dΓ+𝒢0βcΩfalse(w(c)+c42c:C:2cfalse)dΩ, where a ( c ) = (1 − c ) 2 is a degradation function, w ( c ) = 9 c is a monotonically increasing function which represents the energy dissipation per unit volume, and β=401w(c)dc=96/5 is a normalization parameter. ∇ 2 c is a Hessian, that is, (2c)ij=2cxixj and C is a positive‐definite fourth‐order tensor with the same symmetries as the linear elastic stiffness tensor 29 .…”
Section: Phase‐field Approximations Of Anisotropic Fracturementioning
confidence: 99%
“…Assuming a cubic symmetry, three material constants, C 1111 , C 1122 , and C 1212 , suffice to define C . The damage evolution then follows from (in a strong format): 20,23 24𝒢0β2false(C1122+2C1212false)4cx2y2+C11114cx4+4cy4+𝒲(u)a(c)+𝒢0βw(c)=0, complemented by the irreversibility condition ċ0. The resulting anisotropic surface energy 𝒢c(θ) then takes the form: 20,23 𝒢c(θ)=𝒢0C(θ)4, with C(θ)=14false(3C1111+C1122+2C1212false)1+C1111…”
Section: Phase‐field Approximations Of Anisotropic Fracturementioning
confidence: 99%
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“…10 In addition, stress fields can be improved when enriching stress fields with higher-order terms, 11 while crack tracking algorithms can also help to better simulate complex dynamic crack patterns, such as crack branching. 12,13 Recently, phase-field models have been introduced to describe brittle fracture, [14][15][16] allowing for a straightforward treatment of crack branching and merging. 17 Isogeometric analysis has also been introduced in the context of crack propagation analysis.…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%