Abstract

Instabilities in thermally-driven crack growth in thin glass plates have been observed in experiments that slowly immerse a hot, pre-notched glass slide into a cold bath. We show that a nonlocal model of thermomechanical brittle fracture with minimal input parameters can predict the entire phase diagram of fracture measured in experiments for the low immersion speed regime. Geometrical restrictions to crack growth commonly found in other approaches are absent here. We discuss a method for determining the appropriate size of the peridynamic horizon based on a data point around a separating line between crack-type zones in the experimental phase diagram. Once the nonlocal size is smaller than the length-scale introduced by the thermal gradient, the computational results show that no fracture criterion is needed beyond Griffith’s criterion to capture the observed instabilities. The combination of thermal gradients and competing contraction forces on the two sides of the crack are behind the observed crack path instabilities. Elastic (velocity) vortices of material points show how and why the cracks develop along the observed paths. Our results demonstrate that thermally-driven fracture in brittle materials can be predicted with accuracy. We anticipate that this model will lead to design protocols for controlled fracture in brittle materials relevant in materials science and advanced manufacturing.

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