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Buckling of an elastic ridge: competition between wrinkles and creases

Published 5 Apr 2017 in physics.class-ph and cond-mat.soft | (1704.01531v1)

Abstract: We investigate the elastic buckling of a triangular prism made of a soft elastomer. A face of the prism is bonded to a stiff slab that imposes an average axial compression. We observe two possible buckling modes which are localized along the free ridge. For ridge angles $\phi$ below a critical value $\phi\star\approx 90\circ$ experiments reveal an extended sinusoidal mode, while for $\phi$ above $\phi\star$ we observe a series of creases progressively invading the lateral faces starting from the ridge. A numerical linear stability analysis is set up using the finite-element method and correctly predicts the sinusoidal mode for $\phi \leq \phi\star$, as well as the associated critical strain $\epsilon_{\mathrm{c}}(\phi)$. The experimental transition at $\phi\star$ is found to occur when this critical strain $\epsilon_{\mathrm{c}}(\phi)$ attains the value $\epsilon_{\mathrm{c}}(\phi\star) = 0.44$ corresponding to the threshold of the sub-critical surface creasing instability. Previous analyses have focused on elastic crease patterns appearing on planar surfaces, where the role of scale-invariance has been emphasized; our analysis of the elastic ridge provides a different perspective, and reveals that scale-invariance is not a sufficient condition for localization.

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