4.5 Article

Recent Milestones in Unraveling the Full-Field Structure of Dynamic Shear Cracks and Fault Ruptures in Real-Time: From Photoelasticity to Ultrahigh-Speed Digital Image Correlation

Publisher

ASME
DOI: 10.1115/1.4045715

Keywords

earthquake source physics; rupture dynamics; dynamic friction; supershear and supersonic ruptures; digital image correlation

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Funding

  1. US National Science Foundation (NSF) [EAR 1321655, EAR-1651235]
  2. US Geological Survey (USGS) [G16AP00106]
  3. Southern California Earthquake Center (SCEC) [9998]
  4. NSF [EAR-1600087]
  5. USGS [G17AC00047]

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The last few decades have seen great achievements in dynamic fracture mechanics. Yet, it was not possible to experimentally quantify the full-field behavior of dynamic fractures, until very recently. Here, we review our recent work on the full-field quantification of the temporal evolution of dynamic shear ruptures. Our newly developed approach based on digital image correlation combined with ultrahigh-speed photography has revolutionized the capabilities of measuring highly transient phenomena and enabled addressing key questions of rupture dynamics. Recent milestones include the visualization of the complete displacement, particle velocity, strain, stress and strain rate fields near growing ruptures, capturing the evolution of dynamic friction during individual rupture growth, and the detailed study of rupture speed limits. For example, dynamic friction has been the biggest unknown controlling how frictional ruptures develop but it has been impossible, until now, to measure dynamic friction during spontaneous rupture propagation and to understand its dependence on other quantities. Our recent measurements allow, by simultaneously tracking tractions and sliding speeds on the rupturing interface, to disentangle its complex dependence on the slip, slip velocity, and on their history. In another application, we have uncovered new phenomena that could not be detected with previous methods, such as the formation of pressure shock fronts associated with supersonic propagation of shear ruptures in viscoelastic materials where the wave speeds are shown to depend strongly on the strain rate.

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