Abstract

We present an experimental study on mixed-mode crack propagation in thin sheet specimens of a soft silicone elastomer. To introduce mixed-mode loading, we adopted the widely applied pure shear fracture testing geometry, but oriented the initial crack at an inclined angle relative to the direction perpendicular to the external tensile loading. Because of the inclined angle, locally the crack tip was subjected to both tensile and shear loading even though the global loading was tensile, thus resulting in a mixed Mode-I and Mode-II condition for the crack. Altering the inclined angle led to different degrees of mode-mixity and hence different crack propagation trajectories. Using a particle tracking method, we were able to measure the nonlinear deformation fields throughout the entire course of crack propagation. Based on the measured deformation fields, we used J-integral to calculate the energy release rate during crack propagation and found that the results were insensitive to the tangent direction of the crack trajectory, suggesting that the fracture toughness was approximately mode independent. Moreover, the tangent direction of the crack trajectory, when plotted in the reference configuration, was observed to be perpendicular to the direction of maximum principal stretch. The experimental results pave the way for establishing quasi-static mixed-mode fracture criteria for soft silicone elastomer, which has not yet been well understood in the literature.

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