Publication | Open Access
Fracture toughening and toughness asymmetry induced by flexoelectricity
81
Citations
46
References
2015
Year
EngineeringMechanical EngineeringFracture TougheningStrain GradientFerroelectric ApplicationElasticity (Physics)MechanicsPiezoelectric MaterialMaterials ScienceMechanical BehaviorLargest Strain GradientsFracture PhysicsSolid MechanicsPiezoelectricityFerroelasticsSoft ModeApplied PhysicsFerroelectric MaterialsThin FilmsDynamic Crack PropagationMechanics Of MaterialsFracture Mechanics
Cracks generate the largest strain gradients that any material can withstand. Flexoelectricity (coupling between strain gradient and polarization) must therefore play an important role in fracture physics. Here we use a self-consistent continuum model to evidence two consequences of flexoelectricity in fracture: the resistance to fracture increases as structural size decreases, and it becomes asymmetric with respect to the sign of polarization. The latter phenomenon manifests itself in a range of intermediate sizes where piezo- and flexoelectricity compete. In ${\mathrm{BaTiO}}_{3}$ at room temperature, this range spans from 0.1 to 50 nm, a typical thickness range for epitaxial ferroelectric thin films.
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