Date
Thu, 02 Dec 2021
14:00
Location
Virtual
Speaker
Blaise Bourdin
Organisation
McMaster University

Variational phase-field models of fracture have been at the center of a multidisciplinary effort involving a large community of mathematicians, mechanicians, engineers, and computational scientists over the last 25 years or so.

I will start with a modern interpretation of Griffith's classical criterion as a variational principle for a free discontinuity energy and will recall some of the milestones in its analysis. Then, I will introduce the phase-field approximation per se and describe its numerical implementation. I illustrate how phase-field models have led to major breakthroughs in the predictive simulation of fracture in complex situations.

I then will turn my attention to current issues, with a specific emphasis on crack nucleation in nominally brittle materials. I will recall the fundamental incompatibility between Griffith’s theory and nucleation criteria based on a stress yield surface: the strength vs. toughness paradox. I will then present several attempts at addressing this issue within the realm of phase-fracture and discuss their respective strengths and weaknesses. 

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