| Literature DB >> 34270321 |
Matteo Baggioli1,2, Ivan Kriuchevskyi3, Timothy W Sirk4, Alessio Zaccone3,5.
Abstract
The microscopic mechanism by which amorphous solids yield plastically under an externally applied stress or deformation has remained elusive in spite of enormous research activity in recent years. Most approaches have attempted to identify atomic-scale structural "defects" or spatiotemporal correlations in the undeformed glass that may trigger plastic instability. In contrast, in this Letter we show that the topological defects that correlate with plastic instability can be identified, not in the static structure of the glass, but rather in the nonaffine displacement field under deformation. These dislocation-like topological defects (DTDs) can be quantitatively characterized in terms of Burgers circuits (and the resulting Burgers vectors) that are constructed on the microscopic nonaffine displacement field. We demonstrate that (i) DTDs are the manifestation of incompatibility of deformation in glasses as a result of violation of Cauchy-Born rules (nonaffinity); (ii) the resulting average Burgers vector displays peaks in correspondence of major plastic events, including a spectacular nonlocal peak at the yielding transition, which results from self-organization into shear bands due to the attractive interaction between antiparallel DTDs; and (iii) application of Schmid's law to the DTDs leads to prediction of shear bands at 45° for uniaxial deformations, as widely observed in experiments and simulations.Entities:
Year: 2021 PMID: 34270321 DOI: 10.1103/PhysRevLett.127.015501
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Phys Rev Lett ISSN: 0031-9007 Impact factor: 9.161