How do materials fail? Fracture is an every day experience for all of us - sometimes wanted, for example when opening food packages - sometimes dangerous and detrimental, for example when safety relevant constructions collapse and break down. For many materials fracture mechanics is fortunately well-understood, however for the emerging and important complex class of soft materials this is mostly terra incognita. Soft materials are for example underpinning soft robotics, can represent soft biological tissues, constitute various types of sealings, and have many more exciting, oftentimes still upcoming, future applications. Taken together, understanding how various types of soft materials fracture, modelling these intricate processes and eventually being able to simulate soft fracture enables us to either prevent the failure of soft materials or to intentionally exploit fracture of this exiting material class. Imagine for example a future cargo release system based on a kind of bungee rope that fractures precisely at a targeted, extremely large elongation to release its fragile load very gently. Without meticulously mastering the fracturing of soft materials - experimentally, theoretically, and computationally - such imaginative applications will not become a reality.
SoftFrac thus targets the three key aspects of the fracture of soft materials: their experimental investigation, the establishment of a theoretical framework addressing the challenges when modelling soft materials, and a robust and accurate computational setting that enables the prediction and analysis of fracture processes in soft materials. Experimentally investigating soft materials comes with its own challenges due to the difficulties of their handling, the extreme large deformations, which are not easy to control, record and analyse, and their complex interactions with non-mechanical stimuli such as magnetic, electric, optical, and temperature fields. Underpinning our modelling and simulation research is the theory of configurational mechanics, an unconventional approach that allows describing various types of failure processes, and that has been pushed over the past by the applicant. Only the close integration of experiment, modelling, and simulation allows us to jump ahead in the challenging field of fracture of soft materials.