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Thesis
Home   /   Thesis   /   Sub-critical crack growth in oxide glasses

Sub-critical crack growth in oxide glasses

Condensed matter physics, chemistry & nanosciences Solid state physics, surfaces and interfaces

Abstract

Material failure is a concern for scientists and engineers worldwide. This includes oxide glasses, which are integral parts of building, electronics, satellites due to multiple advantageous features, including optical transparency, elevated mechanical and thermal properties, chemical durability, biocompatibility and bioactivity, etc. Despite this, oxide glasses have a significate drawback: they are inherently brittle. Oxide glasses are well known to undergo dynamic fracture (crack propagation velocity of ~km/s – as in the case of a glass crashing to the floor and shattering); yet, there is another fracture mode less noticeable that will be studied during this thesis, where crack fronts grow sub-critically. The growth of these crack fronts is aided by environmental parameters including atmospheric humidity and temperature, and the crack front velocity depends on the local stress felt by a crack tip, coined the stress intensity factor.

Currently, our experimental setup tracks the crack front position in time via a tubular microscope equipped with a camera. Post-analysis of images provides the crack front velocity and reveals the environmental limit K_e and region I. However, the current experimental setup cannot capture regions II and III. Several factors play into this limitation: elevated crack front velocity (10e-4 to 1500 m/s), sample size (5×5×25 mm^3), camera acquisition rates, etc.

In recent years, our team has used the potential drop technique to track the crack front velocity when v > 10e-4 m/s in PMMA. This technique involves the deposition of conductive strips on the sample surface. Subsequently, these lines are attached to a high frequency oscilloscope. As the crack front propagates through the sample, the lines are severed resulting in an increase in the electrical resistance. We now wish to adapt this technique to DCDC samples on oxide glasses. The thesis goal is the development and application of the potential drop techniques to DCDC samples. The challenge concerns the spatial temporal resolution (50 µm and 1 ns) in comparison to the crack tip velocity and sample size. The thesis student will take part in all the steps to realize the experiments: designing and depositing patterns (series of strips) on the glass surfaces using a cleanroom, running sub-critical cracking experiments in Region II and III, and analyzing data acquired during the experiment.

Laboratory

Institut rayonnement et matière de Saclay
Service de Physique de l’Etat Condensé
Systèmes Physiques Hors-équilibre, hYdrodynamique, éNergie et compleXes
Autre
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