We investigate experimentally and theoretically the dynamics of a crack front during the microinstabilities taking place in heterogeneous materials between two successive equilibrium positions. We focus specifically on the spatiotemporal evolution of the front, as it relaxes to a straight configuration, after depinning from a single obstacle of controlled strength and size. We show that this depinning dynamics is not controlled by inertia, but instead by the rate dependency of the dissipative mechanisms taking place within the fracture process zone. This implies that the crack speed fluctuations around its average value v_{m} can be predicted from an overdamped equation of motion (v-v_{m})/v_{0}=[G-G_{c}(v_{m})]/G_{c}(v_{m}) involving the characteristic material speed v_{0}=G_{c}(v_{m})/G_{c}^{'}(v_{m}) that emerges from the variation of fracture energy with crack speed. Our findings pave the way to a quantitative description of the critical depinning dynamics of cracks in disordered solids and open up new perspectives for the prediction of the effective failure properties of heterogeneous materials.
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http://dx.doi.org/10.1103/PhysRevLett.121.235501 | DOI Listing |
Adv Sci (Weinh)
December 2024
Department of Materials Science and Engineering, Pohang University of Science and Technology (POSTECH), 77 Cheongam-Ro, Nam-gu, Pohang, 37673, Republic of Korea.
The evaporation of drops on solid surfaces is a ubiquitous natural phenomenon, and their dynamics play a pivotal role in many biological, environmental, and industrial processes. However, the complexity of the underlying mechanisms has largely confined previous studies to liquid drop evaporation under atmospheric conditions. In this study, the first comprehensive investigation of the evaporation dynamics of conducting polymer-containing drops under controlled vacuum environments is presented.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFChaos
December 2024
Department of Mathematics, School of Sciences, National Institute of Technology Andhra Pradesh, Tadepalligudem 534101, India.
This work delineates a comprehensive investigation of the static and kinetic depinning of a domain wall in a notched ferromagnetic nanostrip. More precisely, we consider a 180° Bloch-type domain wall and examine its behavior under the action of an applied magnetic field, spin-polarized electric current, and Rashba field. Moreover, we assume an artificial notch positioned at the edges of the nanostrip, serving as a pinning site for the wall.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFJ Phys Chem Lett
November 2024
Department of Mechanical Engineering (Robotics), Guangdong Technion - Israel Institute of Technology, Shantou, Guangdong 515063, China.
It is common sense that the droplet is stickier to substrates with larger solid-liquid contact areas. Here, we report that this intuitive trend reverses for hollowed micropillars, where a decrease in solid-liquid contact area caused by an increase in the pore size of a pillar top leads to an increase in the droplet depinning force. As compared to relief of liquid-vapor interface distortion caused by the sliding of the contact line on filled pillars, the pore hinders the contact line sliding, hence leading to enhanced interface distortion and droplet adhesion.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFPhys Chem Chem Phys
October 2024
Department of Physics, College of Science, Yanbian University, Yanji 133000, P. R. China.
With topological spin texture, magnetic domain walls have soliton-like dynamic behaviors in magnetic nanowires, which can be used in information transmission and storage technology. Therefore, precisely controlling the dynamic behavior of the magnetic domain wall and its pinning behavior is one of the important technical challenges in realizing domain-wall-based spintronic devices. In this work, a geometrically defect-free scheme for domain wall pinning/depinning is proposed using micromagnetic simulations based on a tie-shaped asymmetric nanowire, which can precisely control the position of the magnetic domain wall in an external magnetic field.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFPhys Rev E
September 2024
Institut Jean Le Rond D'Alembert (UMR 7190), Sorbonne Université & CNRS, Paris, France.
The intermittent damage evolution preceding the failure of heterogeneous brittle solids is well described by scaling laws. In deciphering its origins, failure is routinely interpreted as a critical transition. However at odds with expectations of universality, a large scatter in the value of the scaling exponents is reported during acoustic emission experiments.
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