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Phase field modeling of fracture in anisotropic brittle solids
Affiliation:1. Institute for Structure Mechanics, Bauhaus University Weimar, Marienstr. 15, Weimar 99423, Germany;2. School of Civil Engineering of Barcelona (ETSECCPB), Departament de Matemática Aplicada 3, Universitat Politècnica de Catalunya, Spain;3. Laboratori de Càlcul Numèric, Universitat Politècnica de Catalunya (UPC Barcelona-Tech), 08034 Barcelona, Spain;4. Professor School of Civil, Environmental and Architectural Engineering, Korea University, Republic of Korea;1. Computational Mechanics, University of Kaiserslautern, P.O. Box 3049, D-67653 Kaiserslautern, Germany;2. Institute of Applied Mechanics, University of Kaiserslautern, P.O. Box 3049, D-67653 Kaiserslautern, Germany
Abstract:A phase field model of fracture that accounts for anisotropic material behavior at small and large deformations is outlined within this work. Most existing fracture phase field models assume crack evolution within isotropic solids, which is not a meaningful assumption for many natural as well as engineered materials that exhibit orientation-dependent behavior. The incorporation of anisotropy into fracture phase field models is for example necessary to properly describe the typical sawtooth crack patterns in strongly anisotropic materials. In the present contribution, anisotropy is incorporated in fracture phase field models in several ways: (i) Within a pure geometrical approach, the crack surface density function is adopted by a rigorous application of the theory of tensor invariants leading to the definition of structural tensors of second and fourth order. In this work we employ structural tensors to describe transverse isotropy, orthotropy and cubic anisotropy. Latter makes the incorporation of second gradients of the crack phase field necessary, which is treated within the finite element context by a nonconforming Morley triangle. Practically, such a geometric approach manifests itself in the definition of anisotropic effective fracture length scales. (ii) By use of structural tensors, energetic and stress-like failure criteria are modified to account for inherent anisotropies. These failure criteria influence the crack driving force, which enters the crack phase field evolution equation and allows to set up a modular structure. We demonstrate the performance of the proposed anisotropic fracture phase field model by means of representative numerical examples at small and large deformations.
Keywords:Brittle fracture  Anisotropic crack propagation  Phase field modeling  Finite elements
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