Self-Replicating Cracks: A Collaborative Fracture Mode in Thin Films

Marthelot J.; Roman B.; Bico, J; Teisseire, J; Dalmas, D; Melo, F

Abstract

Straight cracks are observed in thin coatings under residual tensile stress, resulting into the classical network pattern observed in china crockery, old paintings, or dry mud. Here, we present a novel fracture mechanism where delamination and propagation occur simultaneously, leading to the spontaneous self-replication of an initial template. Surprisingly, this mechanism is active below the standard critical tensile load for channel cracks and selects a robust interaction length scale on the order of 30 times the film thickness. Depending on triggering mechanisms, crescent alleys, spirals, or long bands are generated over a wide range of experimental parameters. We describe with a simple physical model, the selection of the fracture path and provide a configuration diagram displaying the different failure modes.

Más información

Título según WOS: Self-Replicating Cracks: A Collaborative Fracture Mode in Thin Films
Título según SCOPUS: Self-replicating cracks: A collaborative fracture mode in thin films
Título de la Revista: PHYSICAL REVIEW LETTERS
Volumen: 113
Número: 8
Editorial: APS Physics job
Fecha de publicación: 2014
Idioma: English
DOI:

10.1103/PhysRevLett.113.085502

Notas: ISI, SCOPUS - ISI