Abstract
We present a mesoscale elastoplastic model of creep in disordered materials, which considers temperature-dependent stochastic activation of localized deformation events that are coupled by internal stresses, leading to collective avalanche dynamics. We generalize this stochastic plasticity model by introducing damage in terms of a local strength that decreases, on statistical average, with increasing local plastic strain. The model captures failure in terms of strain localization in a catastrophic shear band concomitant with a finite-time singularity of the creep rate. The statistics of avalanches in the run-up to failure is characterized by a decreasing avalanche exponent τ that, at failure, approaches the value τ=1.5 typical of a critical branching process. The average avalanche rate exhibits an inverse Omori law as a function of time to failure. The distribution of interavalanche times turns out to be consistent with the epidemic-type aftershock sequences (ETAS) model of earthquake statistics.
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