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Dynamic anticrack propagation in snow

Gaume, Johan  
•
Gast, T.
•
Teran, J.
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September 30, 2018
Nature Communications

Continuum numerical modeling of dynamic crack propagation has been a great challenge over the past decade. This is particularly the case for anticracks in porous materials, as reported in sedimentary rocks, deep earthquakes, landslides, and snow avalanches, as material inter-penetration further complicates the problem. Here, on the basis of a new elastoplasticity model for porous cohesive materials and a large strain hybrid Eulerian–Lagrangian numerical method, we accurately reproduced the onset and propagation dynamics of anticracks observed in snow fracture experiments. The key ingredient consists of a modified strain-softening plastic flow rule that captures the complexity of porous materials under mixed-mode loading accounting for the interplay between cohesion loss and volumetric collapse. Our unified model represents a significant step forward as it simulates solid-fluid phase transitions in geomaterials which is of paramount importance to mitigate and forecast gravitational hazards.

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s41467-018-05181-w.pdf

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Publisher's Version

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openaccess

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CC BY

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1.15 MB

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Adobe PDF

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c8020a6ae5bf79991ecd735021227a9a

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