From Quasi-Static to Rapid Fracture E. Bouchaud, S. Navéos To cite this version: E. Bouchaud, S. Navéos. From Quasi-Static to Rapid Fracture. Journal de Physique I, EDP Sciences, 1995, 5 (5), pp.547-554. <10.1051/jp1:1995150>. <jpa-00247080> HAL Id: jpa-00247080 https://hal.archives-ouvertes.fr/jpa-00247080 Submitted on 1 Jan 1995 HAL is a multi-disciplinary open access archive for the deposit and dissemination of scientific research documents, whether they are published or not. The documents may come from teaching and research institutions in France or abroad, or from public or private research centers. L’archive ouverte pluridisciplinaire HAL, est destinée au dépôt et à la diffusion de documents scientifiques de niveau recherche, publiés ou non, émanant des établissements d’enseignement et de recherche français ou étrangers, des laboratoires publics ou privés. J. Phys. France I (1995) 5 547-554 MAY 1995, PAGE 547 Classification Physics Abstracts 81.40Np 05.40+j 62.20Mk Short Communication From Quasi.Static to Bouchaud Navéos E. and S. (OM), O.N.E.R.A. (Received 7 Quatre profils avec étudiés sont décroît exposant une trie crack la avec sur de vitesse. Four same fracture sample velocity. Pour hypothesis, 1-e-, lengthscales trie measured 24 B-P. 72, 92322 Châtillon Cedex, France February 1995) correspondant à quatre vitesses de propagation de fissure échantillonj et révèlent l'existence d'une longueur de coupure des échelles de longueur supérieures à (, on retrouve un 0.84. A plus petite échelle, l'exposant mesuré accord est en quasi-statique (QS) du front de fissure, et vaut (~s Ù 0.45. profiles show lengthscales For At and Leclerc, Division rupture le même rugosité voisin de ( ct hypothèse de propagation recovered. is de la de Abstract. on Avenue Fracture February 1995, accepted Résumé. différentes ( qui 29 Rapid trie larger smaller corresponding existence (, (, trie index is thon than roughness of trie a to four diOEere1~t crack velocities are studied lengthscale ( decreasmg with the previously reported roughl~ess index ( ct 0.84 fracture profile lits with a quasi-static (QS) close to (~s CÎ 0.45. crossover fracture surfaces clearly established that be considered self-affine objects. can as pioneering work of Mandelbrot experiments using various experiet ai. [l], many mental techniques (profilometry [2,3], microscopy and image analysis [4-10], scanning tunnel(STM) [11], electrochemistry [12], etc.) on materials as dilferent as electron microscopy mg aluminium alloys [7], rocks [3], steels il,5,10,12], intermetallic compounds [8,9] or ceramics [4], decades [7] fracture surfaces exhibit scaling properties on two [2,8,9] or three bave shown that materials), for of lengthscales. At "large enough" lengthscales (trie scale for metallic micron rapid crack propagation (~'uncontrolled fracture" ), all reported values of trie roughness index (or Hurst exponent) ( are close to 0.8. It was suggested [7] that this value might be "universal", i-e-, independent of trie fracture mode and of trie material (see also [2]). However, significantly smaller values are measured either at very small lengthscales (nanometers), or in the case of slow crack propagation. As a matter of fact, STM experiments il1] report values of the roughness index close to 0.6 in trie case of fractured tungstene (regular stepped region), On the other hand, low cycle fatigue experiments on a and close to 0.5 for graphite iii]. results particularly attractive steel sample have led to a value of ( close to 0.6 [12]. These are surface in a they report roughness indices close to the roughness of a minimum energy since [13,14]. It was suggested by Chudnowsky and Kunin [15], Kardar [16], r&ndom environment It is After Q Les now trie Editions de Physique 1995 iowNALD8mYsiQu8L-T. s, NOS.MAY199s 21 JOURNAL 548 DE 31.0 I N°5 mm Fatigue tension in PHYSIQUE 4.4 Profile Fig. Sketch l. 1 is in trie trie to and that by the fracture for rapid velocities. shall Pr°fl'e 4 of trie fatigue zone, fracture" and François by a path chosen energy crack is ~~°fi'~ 3 on the crack minimised. This basis in a of propose the following an fracture a random applicatiol~ alternative model environment for porous should be ductile such which clearly enough lengthscales at compatible with the prediction quasi-static propagation, might be valid However, although our results are in ~ ~~°fi~~ sample, showing the four profiles which have been investigated. Profile Profile 4 corresponds and thus corresponds to trie lower crack velocity. for which trie crack velocity is much higher. zone, broken fracture "instantaneous Roux 6 assumption, small '~quasi-static" description, the overall cannot be fulfilled for low or which il?] materials that of this should enough model, we lead to a comparable exponent, but which should be doser to the actual crack propagation mechanism. mechanism is valid indeed up to a distance ( which In this letter, we show that a quasi-static of this new length and the The existence decreases with increasing crack velocity. crossover the result of this analysis of the smaii iengthscales behaviour central are paper. A notched CT sample (dimensions 12.5 x 30 x 31 mm~, see Fig. l) of the Super a2 alloy [18] T13Al-based first precracked in fatigue at 30 Hz, with a fixed ratio R of 0.1 (the applied is ioad oscillates between a load P~~~ and a load P~~~/10 at a frequency of minimum maximum 2750 N), in order that the total length of the crack after the fatigue test 30 Hz with Pm~~ Fracture is achieved through uniaxial is close to 60% of the sample length. tension (mode I, of the alloy is composed of a2 (ordered microstructure [19] for example). Note that the see phase) lath in a fl (disordered phase, stable at higher than lllo °C) matrix. temperatures brittle needles both in thickness, length and The Plasticity of the fi-phase orientation. vary shown to play an important role in the fracture properties of the material. The broken was sample is electrochemically nickel-plated (the thickness of the deposit being approximateiy Four profiles are obtained by subsequently cutting and polishing the sample 100 microns). perpendicularly to the direction of propagation of the crack (see Fig. l). Only the crack velocity corresponding to the fatigue profile (1) could be estimated, since the crack increased during the last part of the fatigue test, corresponding to 13000 cycles. millimeter by only one This velocity is close to 2 micrometers the sound velocity Cs per second, 1-e-, 5 x 10~ times material (Cs ct 4700 m/s), whereas in the uncontrolled in the fracture the velocity is zone, expected to saturate at a value which is at least 0.2 0.3Cs. with a scanning electron These profiles are observed Zeiss DSM 960 at various microscope magnifications 10 to 12 images were made for each profile with magnifications ranging from = N°5 QUASI-STATIC FROM ~ FRACTURE RAPID ~$~ ' ~ siope d $ TO 549 100 046 ~i ~ ~~ o - i ~ ~' l Îi ~. a o-1 0.01 0 100 (micrometers) r (see Eq. (l) for a. definition of zmax(r)). Averaged expenmental as a r plotted with error bars computed from the variance of experimental results obtained from various micrographs (at trie same or at dioEerent magnifications). Trie continuous fine corresponds to trie 3- (profile 1) or 2-parameter non-hnear fit (see Eq. (2)), with (~s fixed to trie value 0.45. curve Profile 1: A 0.56 + 0.02; B 0.28 + 0.01; ( 0.838 + 0.007; fi CÎ 5 ~lm; zmax(r fi Ù 2.2 ~lm. Fig. zmax(r) 2. points function of are = = = = give a better between trie contrast registered through Delta Kevex in are a segmentation is performed using the system, and sent to an IBM PC 486-33, system Synoptics Synergy Board. The obtained binary images (the weight of each point located the profile being 1, the weight of any other point being 0) of length 703 pixels are sent to on workstation their where statistical various When properties are computed. the profile is a branched with secondary cracks, both the whole and its backbone considered. In structure are the profiles) this letter however, only the results backbones (including non-branched concerning reported. are shown in that a particularly reliable quantity to be It was occasions measured various a on self-affine profile in order to determine height maximum its roughness index ( is the average x50 Backscattered x3000. to alloy trie and z~~x(r), which defined is ~~'~~~~~ z~ax(r) In law the is computed case of electrons regime'extending of profile the case order [20] Ml~lZ(r')lz<r'<z+r micrograph for profiles each 4 (rapid over two fracture to to grey levels where trie image 256 ~~~l~(~')l~<r'<~+r "~ on profile follows as used in are Images deposit. nickel three zone), ail the >~co r~ (1) to 4. analysed micrographs decades, for which the exponent contrary, present remains close a power 0.8. to micrographs at high propagation zone), on the 1 (slow crack magnification also present a power law increase, but the exponent is significantly smaller, lying generally between 0.4 and 0.6. In the four cases, z~a~(r) is averaged over the results obtained distribution micrographs. Error bars are estimated from the variance of the from the various relative to the various micrographs. of points coming from the results smaller of the relative behaviour The to profile 1 (fracture in fatigue) at curve average with an exponent m0.46 (see inset of first studied, showing a power law distances increase is theoretical roughness index (~s of a minimum Fig. 2), 1-e-, remarkably close to the energy 0.4, 0.45 and 0.5 is plotted against r, and the surface [13,14]. Then z~~~/r(Qs, with (~s fit using the expression three plots are fitted with the Kaleidagraph°/~ non-linear curve In = ~~~~ r(QS Similar results are obtained using the = Xvgr A + B ~(-(QS non-linear curve (2) fit. JOURNAL 550 PHYSIQUE DE I N°5 jitting of zm~~(r). non-linear Table I. Fatigue fracture (profile 1, see Fig. l ): results of the (~s assuming the ~alues o-1, 0.$5 (see Fig. 2) and 0.5, zm~~(r) is jitted according to equadetermined according ta equation (3) and is ezpressed tion (2). The quasi-static blob size fi is Errer bars are only resulting from the fit. in microns, r is the confidence ratio. Fatigue results fracture: of the fitting non-linear of zm~~(r) (~s A B ( fi r 0.4 0.51+0.02 0.34+0.01 0.815+0.005 3 0.992 0.45 0.56 + 0.02 0.28 + 0.01 0.5 0.64 + 0.02 0.20 + 0.01 0.838 + 0.875 + 0.07 5 0.987 0.009 10 0.977 Expression (2) is the simplest to account for the asymptotic power law behaviour corresponding, at short distances, to a quasi-static fracture mode power law with a roughness index (~s mode and at larger distances, to a rapid fracture power law with a roughness index ( yet function certainly complex, but, as will be seen real be deterrnined. The is to more crossover (fatigue) for profiles far from reality, especially following, tl~is assumption the is not in too this Furthermore, and 4 (~'uncontrolled fracture" )~ which are closer to the asymptotic cases. length profile the fracture for between quasi-static allows us to define the (~ zone crossover equal, 1e., the length at which the two and the rapta fracture asymptotic terms are one as i The fit sets of (~s for obtained results obtained . 0.45 is = exp in Figure 2. shown summarised are ~ç ~ç~~~ in Table in iii1 Results (3) the concerning following three I. high velocity cracks [7-9], as well as favours a value of (~s close to 0.45; Fig. 2) power (qs 0.5 leads to a particularly high value of (. Subsequently, the relative to profiles 2 curves according to equation (2), but ( is kept equal to its previously determined to 4 are also fitted value, while A and B are the results of the fitting procedure. Values of (~ (i 2, 3, 4) are again determined through equation (3). The results are summarized corresponding in Table II. Fits 0.45 are shown in Figures 3 to 5 for profiles 2 to 4, respectively. to the value (~s As a of fact, the actual values of (~ are very sensitive matter to the value of (~s, for which precision is rather bad because of the too few experimental points at short distances, the although, in the case of profile 1, one con determine a '~short distance" exponent close to 0.46. Consistency previously with short-distance the law values measured (see behaviour inset of ( for of " = = On hand, other the that (~ decreases increases. clear it is correlatively, the crack velocity fatigue (between 3 and 5 pm, the much fracture process, in the Although the local the stress intensity micrometer factor region micron II), it could decrease below 1 crack propagation regime, for which the Table unstable "quasi-static" alternative an be environment motion rnodelled as [22, 23]. of vortex the for at crack K or, fracture in the of end velocity is trace From lines in seems more appropriate to describe to the crack surface propagation minimum front surfaces it was recently suggested that the fracture velocity V random propagating in at a non-zero a a this picture, and using the results of Ertas and Kardar [24] for dirty superconductors, one finds that the high velocity fracture matter a exponent is remarkably close measured description during fatigue loading. As the the in higher. ezponent, could see when Lying of of fact, litre QUASI-STATIC FROM N°5 TO FRACTURE RAPID 551 length for profile1 ezpressed in micrometers, determined by (; rather the is sensiti~e imposed of ~alue ta (QS. fi is desee con three-parameter non-linear jitting (Fig. 2), while for1= 2,3,4, (~ curue determined through a two-parameter (Figs. is jitting 3-5), ( being kept ta the ~alue decurue termined from the analysis of profile 1 (Fig. 2). One con note that the ~alue of ( is not ~ery sensiti~e ta the ~alue of (Qs. Table (~ is the II. crosso~er equation (3). One through a termined that lengths Crossover (QS ( ~l 0.4 0.815 3 for the ~2 2 0.45 0.838 5 2 0.5 0.875 10 6 various analysed profiles ~4 ~3 0.6 0.05 0.3 3 ioo ioo Z $É ~ o Û ( . - # _ ' « 0.01 0.01 r surface hould propagation anisotropic, (~ with ci reported here a is also indeed ioo a to index 0.75 measured 3. the in to propagation). a of certain regime, however, Interestingly, velocity low rack egime which is rather for this ioo Gi É E Î 2i a o-i 0.01 r 4. close to the here problem, where JOURNAL 552 PHYSIQUE I DE N°5 ioo Z É Î ~ ( ~' C ~'w fi 0.01 r 5. ig. ransition, the elow ould rack investigated this regime [25], behaviour is to V~~, sting is et Roux Similar ai. to within are (AFM) which, - crack actual the relationship by the with ncreasing The observes crack is In i -, due that, in It was ranching latter 8,9,19,22,23], that are this in interested to result the ere, power a determination lower limit in that quantitative of (c as no no y", with aw, of perfectly is the our limit y as in interested in upper with well experiment as checked we ontrary, emphasize very lead to the to case, rougher an which urther compatible of ( the increases with fracture orphology the urfaces, low but has which transformations espect: homogeneous for disorder at urfaces [21] crack of importance fracture flat nstability the their the with shown is the of determination racture also velocities edge. crack (c were as thon of can often Higher erformed - notch of more average smaller significantly authors these fact, initial be hieved). length crack be explore and lectrically, In the describe. (note atomic to might above, Visilog y. roughness One one velocity we regime" 0.83 could be crack velocity ours. On the with A the with an precise should provide a intensity factor K. stress has been fracture surfaces [28]. to y out ointed of property observations ould istance to decreases kinetic distance crack xperiments local the egmented in fatigue, for measured ai. the ~'long close be and the with of determination and nough, eing a is load high of this pinning. studied by rid get images are with order which the in already con et chmittbuhl further hand, another length lation of pinning the not is currently is the when to lane) 1024) x way under as between that Note are other the velocity 0 confirmed. Quantitative duly crack = ( The observations. discontinuous: low-velocity as with velocity be able z (1024 larger which results previous microscope On the highly this urthermore, 27]. [26, for force if our resemblance some is its front obstacles icrostructural lie with bears ). decreasing ngth also erformed are plated, system. The to onstrained velocity = ((s pendent agreement load the crack (the ransition below the on that result lengths trapped recently a in of ovement be of the hold crack short Kardar and Ertas with 3, = the can ncrease next ather for since transition it the çi with during fatigue predicted ail. at propagate not only crack crack velocities, seems it never een to referred observed now on as that this roughening metallic alloys, to concern secondary velocity. omparison of bath N°5 QUASI-STATIC FROM disordered the and homogeneous more materials RAPID STM FRACTURE 553 lengthscales various at AFM, and real "phase diagram" scale~ using both micrometer TO from electron standard or or the nanometer to optical microscopy certainly help to draw a for fracture. conclusion, it has been shown that there exists a length ( which decreases with crossover increasing crack length, and correlatively~ with increasing stress intensity factor and crack velocity, which separates two fracture regimes. At lengthscales higher than (, the previously reported roughness index ( ce 0.8 is measured, while the small lengthscale (< () behaviour lits with a pinning/depinning mechanism hypothesis, for which ( m 0.45. Finally, it should be noted that these two fracture regimes characterized by two fixed roughindices and separated by a length which depends on the crack velocity cari be ness crossover misinterpreted as a unique regime characterized by a fractal dimension continuously varying with the velocity. A similar confusion made in the past by considering that the roughwas exponent would vary continuously with the fracture toughness KIC, while it was recently ness could In that shown it is the length correlation self-affine of the fracture surface which in some cases is of KIC (29]. function a Acknowledgments experiments Enlightening Fracture Thomas. achieved were collaboration in discussions with Lemoine, G. Lapasset and Thomas and G. Lapasset A. with Bouchaud, J.-P. M. M. are gratefully acknowledged. References iii Mandelbrot [2] Maloy K-J-, [3] Schmittbum Passoja B-B-, J., Gentier [4] Mecholsky J-J-, Passoja [5] Mu Z-Q- al~d Hinnchsen S. and D.E. Lung C.W., R-H-, Paullay and D.E. A., Hansen E.L. : and R-O-, Dauskardt I?i Bouchaud E., Lapasset G. and Planès J., Europhys. [8] Bouchaud E., Lapasset G. and Planès J., [9] J., Planès Bouchaud V.Y., V.Y., Milmal~ Milman [12] Imre L.V. Stelmashenko A., Pajkossy T. and G., [13] Mézard [14] Halpin-Healy T., Phys. [15] Chudl~ovsky [16] M. and A. M., Kardar and Parisi and Disorder Phys. J. Kumn and A 42 B., J. (1993) 639. J. Am. I Acia Meiall. Acta 1 Mater. 1059. A 46 (1992) Mater. 40 72 (1989) 60. 38 (1990) 143. 73. (1993) 48 2917. 3523. R-C-, Phys. Ball R., Prog. (1991) Soc. 848. (1990) 13 68 Geram. (1993) al~d Metall. France Mater. Rev. Lett. 38 (1994) Sci. (1992) 1819. and Guyon, 71 (1993) 204; 425. 809. 711. Appt. Phys. J-C- LeU. 1 N-A- (1990) Fracture, (1988) Reu. Blumenfeld and Nyikos L., Reu. Fracials Stelmashenko N-A- 20 S., Phys. Reu. B Navéos P-J-, Phys. Cote R., Blumenfeld Ritchie Lapasset G., and E. McAnulty P., Meisel Lett. 21 Appl. Phys. [6] [loi [iii F. D (1984) 721. (1992) 213. 308 Reu. Feinberg-Ringel K-S-, Phys. Haubensak (London) Nature S., Phys. Roux S., Geophys. Lent. Roux and J. A.J., and (1987) 62 Charmet, S. 4124. Roux E. Eds. (Plenum, New York, 1990). il?] [18] [19] Roux S. and Blackbum Lawn B.R., François D., Scrtpta M.J. and Fracture Smith of Metall. M.P., US Brittle 25 Patent (1991) No. Solids, 2~~ edition 1092. 4,716,020 (1987). (Cambridge University Press, Canlbridge, 1993). JOURNAL 554 [20] [21] I (Plenum Press, New York, 1988). Feder J., Fractals Fineberg J., Gross S-P-, Marder M. and Swinney H-L-, Phys. [22] Bouchaud J.-P., [23] Bouchaud E., Ertas D. and Kardar Ertas D. and Kardar [26] Roux S. and J.-P., Bouchaud [25] Hansen J., Schmittbum E., Lapasset Bouchaud [24] [27] PHYSIQUE DE Smittbuhl J., Roux [29] Bouchaud E. and J. 69 A., 4 S. J. 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