Title of article :
Evolution of bond fractures in a randomly distributed fiber network
Author/Authors :
P. Isaksson، نويسنده , , Raymond R. Hagglund، نويسنده ,
Issue Information :
روزنامه با شماره پیاپی سال 2007
Abstract :
Fracture in a planar randomly ordered fiber network subjected to approximately homogenous macroscopic stress and
strain field is considered. A theory describing material degradation on a macroscopic scale is derived via Griffith’s energy
balance for an internal fractured area in the network assuming the active fracture process on the microscopic level is fiber–
fiber bond breakage. Attention is confined to a purely mechanical theory assuming isothermal processes and the theory
relies on equations commonly used in theories of statistical physics. In the theory, a bond breaking driving force is stated
to be equal to the elastic strain energy density of a non-fractured network. A debond fraction can be coupled to a linearly
decrease of the network’s macroscopic stiffness. The rate of the fracture processes is determined by the network’s inherent
properties (bond and fiber density, bond strength, etc.). During the loading process, until onset of localization, the bond
breaks occur at randomly distributed locations spread over the fiber network and the theory estimate material degradation
on a macroscopic level. When localization takes place, the fracture process changes from a two-dimensional randomly distributed
process to a one-dimensional process and other theories have to be included to describe post-localization behavior.
An approximately in-plane isotropic low-density paper is used in tensile experiments while monitoring acoustic
emission activity to evaluate the theory. The experimentally obtained results support the theory surprisingly well
Keywords :
Bond fracture , fiber network , Statistical mechanics
Journal title :
International Journal of Solids and Structures
Journal title :
International Journal of Solids and Structures