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Comparison of computational methods for predicting plastic activity in amorphous materials

Invited

Abstract

Imposing an external driving, amorphous solids can flow via a succession of plastic rearrangement of localized particles. Numerous numerical and experimental studies have shown that loci of plastic instability in glasses are triggered by spatially localized soft spots in direct analogy with dislocations present in crystalline solids, although the population and microscopic structure of the former being significantly different from the latter. The detection and nature of such “amorphous defects” have received a lot of attention, one of the goals being to predict from the microscopic structure itself which regions are likely to undergo a rearrange upon deformation. In this study, we investigate plasticity in a model glass former driven via Athermal Quasistatic Shear. Using SWAP Monte Carlo, we are able to prepare equilibrium amorphous configurations from high to very low temperatures, which translates in controlling the crossover behavior from ductile to brittle glasses. We compute various structural indicators ranging from purely structural to highly non-linear methods that require the knowledge of the interactions between constituents. We fully quantify how well these metrics compete with each other for various glass stabilities and how far in the deformation (here the strain) do they perform in predicting plastic events. Moreover, we are capable of extracting estimates for the full spatial distribution of plastic defects both in quiescent glasses and across the yielding transition, allowing to microscopically characterize and draw a line between ductile and brittle materials.

Presenters

  • David Richard

    Univ of Amsterdam

Authors

  • David Richard

    Univ of Amsterdam

  • Misaki Ozawa

    Ecole normale supérieur

  • Sylvain Patinet

    ESPCI, PMMH

  • Ethan Stanifer

    Syracuse University, University of Michigan

  • Baoshuang Shang

    Beijing Computational Science Research Center

  • Sean Ridout

    University of Pennsylvania

  • Bin Xu

    Beijing Computational Science Research Center, Johns Hopkins University

  • Ge Zhang

    University of Pennsylvania

  • Peter Morse

    Duke University

  • Jean-Louis BARRAT

    Univ. Grenoble Alpes

  • Ludovic Berthier

    Laboratoire Charles Coulomb, University of Montpellier, Univ of Montpellier

  • Michael Falk

    Johns Hopkins University

  • Pengfei Guan

    Beijing Computational Science Research Center, Beijing Computational Science Res Ctr

  • Andrea Liu

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

  • Kirsten Martens

    Univ. Grenoble Alpes

  • Srikanth Sastry

    Jawaharlal Nehru Center for Advanced Scientific Research, Jawaharlal Nehru Centre for Advanced Scientific Research, Jawaharlal Nehru Centre For Advanced Scientific Research

  • Damien Vandembroucq

    ESPCI

  • edan lerner

    Univ of Amsterdam

  • M Lisa Manning

    Syracuse University, Department of Physics, Syracuse University, Dept of Physics and BioInspired Institute, Syracuse University, Physics, Syracuse University