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Modeling shear band formation in amorphous solids using a structuro-elasto-plasticity (StEP) model

ORAL

Abstract

Modeling shear band formation of brittle amorphous solids under load is an ongoing challenge. In this study, a newly developed structuro-elasto-plasticity (StEP) model is used to capture the essential physics for brittle response. The local disordered structure is described by a machine learning-informed property, softness, which represents the propensity of a local region to rearrange. Softness interacts with the elastic strain and plastic rearrangements. Details of these interactions are measured from two particulate systems that exhibit shear band formation during deformation: quasi-static tensile experiments of particle rafts and computational simulations of tensile deformation of polymer nanopillars. Direct microscopic measurements capture the interplay between structure, dynamics and elasticity, such as a local increase of softness after rearrangements indicating structural weakening. Such effects are then incorporated into a lattice StEP model, which qualitatively captures the shear band formation process as well as brittle-to-ductile transitions when system variables (e.g. temperature) are changed.

Presenters

  • Hongyi Xiao

    University of Pennsylvania

Authors

  • Hongyi Xiao

    University of Pennsylvania

  • Ge Zhang

    University of Pennsylvania

  • Robert Ivancic

    University of Pennsylvania, National Institute of Standards and Technology

  • Entao Yang

    University of Pennsylvania, Department of Chemical and Biomolecular Engineering, University of Pennsylvania

  • Robert Riggleman

    University of Pennsylvania, Chemical and Biomolecular Engineering, University of Pennsylvania, Department of Chemical and Biomolecular Engineering, University of Pennsylvania

  • Andrea Liu

    University of Pennsylvania, Department of Physics and Astronomy, University of Pennsylvania

  • Douglas J Durian

    University of Pennsylvania