Title of article
Nanotechnological applications of nonlinear surface acoustic waves: Mechanism of brittle fracture
Author/Authors
P. Hess *، نويسنده , , A.M. Lomonosov، نويسنده ,
Issue Information
روزنامه با شماره پیاپی سال 2005
Pages
6
From page
123
To page
128
Abstract
Strongly nonlinear surface acoustic waves (SAWs) with shock fronts were used to study impulsive fracture in anisotropic
silicon crystals and isotropic fused quartz. With this method, spatially localized dynamic fracture was studied without an
artificial pre-cracking. SAWs allow the investigation of mode I tensile stress and mode II shear stress fracture. For silicon, the
difference between the measured critical fracture stress of 1–2 GPa and the theoretical tensile strength of 22 GPa is discussed in
terms of Griffith’s approach. However, due to the biaxial stress field applied with SAWs and the low ideal shear stress of 6.8 GPa,
the nucleation process may not be uniaxial and purely tensile in silicon. In fused quartz, nucleation occurred via tensile crack
opening at the surface and propagation into the bulk proceeded at an angle of 558–608 to the surface normal in the direction of
SAWpropagation. This behavior could be described theoretically by calculating the energy release rate as a function of direction
and assuming that stable tip propagation is obtained under pure mode I conditions.
Keywords
Surface acoustic waves , tensile stress , shear stress , Impulsive fracture
Journal title
Applied Surface Science
Serial Year
2005
Journal title
Applied Surface Science
Record number
1001190
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