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Inelastic rotations and pseudoturbulent plastic avalanches in crystals

Roberta Baggio, Oğuz Umut Salman, Lev Truskinovsky

2023Physical review. E13 citationsDOI

Abstract

Plastic deformations in crystals produce microstructures with randomly oriented patches of unstressed lattice forming complex textures. We use a mesoscopic Landau-type tensorial model of crystal plasticity to show that in such textures rotations can originate from crystallographically exact microslips which self organize in the form of laminates of a pseudotwin type. The formation of such laminates can be viewed as an effective internal "wrinkling" of the crystal lattice. While such "wrinkling" disguises itself as an elastically neutral rotation, behind it is inherently dissipative, dislocation-mediated process. Our numerical experiments reveal pseudoturbulent effective rotations with power-law distributed spatial correlations which suggests that the process of dislocational self-organization is inherently unstable and points toward the necessity of a probabilistic description of crystal plasticity.

Topics & Concepts

Mesoscopic physicsCrystal plasticityMicroscale chemistryCondensed matter physicsPlasticityMaterials scienceSlip (aerodynamics)Plastic crystalLattice (music)DislocationPower lawPhysicsTurbulenceMechanicsComposite materialThermodynamicsPhase transitionMathematicsStatisticsAcousticsMathematics educationMicrostructure and mechanical propertiesCellular Mechanics and InteractionsForce Microscopy Techniques and Applications
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