An adhesive unilateral contact problem between visco-elastic heat-conductive bodies in linear Kelvin-Voigt rheology is scrutinized. The flow-rule for debonding the adhesive is considered rate-independent, unidirectional, and non-associative due to dependence on the mixity of modes of delamination, namely of Mode I (opening) and of Mode II (shearing).
Such mode-mixity dependence of delamination is a very pronounced (and experimentally confirmed) phenomenon typically considered in engineering models. An anisothermal, thermodynamically consistent model is derived, considering a heat-conductive viscoelastic material and the coupling via thermal expansion and adhesion-depending heat transition through the contact surface.
We prove the existence of weak solutions by passing to the limit in a carefully designed semi-implicit time-discretization scheme.