Your browser doesn't support javascript.
loading
Mostrar: 20 | 50 | 100
Resultados 1 - 6 de 6
Filtrar
Mais filtros










Base de dados
Intervalo de ano de publicação
1.
Phys Rev Lett ; 128(9): 098001, 2022 Mar 04.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-35302798

RESUMO

We investigate avalanches and clusters associated with plastic rearrangements and the nature of structural change in the prototypical strong glass, silica, computationally. We perform a detailed analysis of avalanches, and of spatially disconnected clusters that constitute them, for a wide range of system sizes. Although qualitative aspects of yielding in silica are similar to other glasses, the statistics of clusters exhibits significant differences, which we associate with differences in local structure. Across the yielding transition, anomalous structural change and densification, associated with a suppression of tetrahedral order, is observed to accompany strain localization.

2.
J Chem Phys ; 156(6): 064502, 2022 Feb 14.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-35168346

RESUMO

We study numerically the yielding transition of a two dimensional model glass subjected to athermal quasi-static cyclic shear deformation, with the aim of investigating the effect on the yielding behavior of the degree of annealing, which in turn depends on the preparation protocol. We find two distinct regimes of annealing separated by a threshold energy. Poorly annealed glasses progressively evolve toward the threshold energy as the strain amplitude is increased toward the yielding value. Well annealed glasses with initial energies below the threshold energy exhibit stable behavior, with a negligible change in energy with increasing strain amplitude, until they yield. Discontinuities in energy and stress at yielding increase with the degree of annealing, consistent with recent results found in three dimensions. We observe a significant structural change with strain amplitude that closely mirrors the changes in energy and stresses. We investigate groups of particles that are involved in plastic rearrangements. We analyze the distributions of avalanche sizes, of clusters of connected rearranging particles, and related quantities, employing finite size scaling analysis. We verify previously investigated relations between exponents characterizing these distributions.

3.
Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A ; 118(16)2021 Apr 20.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-33850022

RESUMO

Yielding behavior in amorphous solids has been investigated in computer simulations using uniform and cyclic shear deformation. Recent results characterize yielding as a discontinuous transition, with the degree of annealing of glasses being a significant parameter. Under uniform shear, discontinuous changes in stresses at yielding occur in the high annealing regime, separated from the poor annealing regime in which yielding is gradual. In cyclic shear simulations, relatively poorly annealed glasses become progressively better annealed as the yielding point is approached, with a relatively modest but clear discontinuous change at yielding. To understand better the role of annealing on yielding characteristics, we perform athermal quasistatic cyclic shear simulations of glasses prepared with a wide range of annealing in two qualitatively different systems-a model of silica (a network glass) and an atomic binary mixture glass. Two strikingly different regimes of behavior emerge. Energies of poorly annealed samples evolve toward a unique threshold energy as the strain amplitude increases, before yielding takes place. Well-annealed samples, in contrast, show no significant energy change with strain amplitude until they yield, accompanied by discontinuous energy changes that increase with the degree of annealing. Significantly, the threshold energy for both systems corresponds to dynamical cross-over temperatures associated with changes in the character of the energy landscape sampled by glass-forming liquids.

4.
Phys Rev E ; 94(6-1): 062138, 2016 Dec.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-28085447

RESUMO

A dissipative stochastic sandpile model is constructed and studied on small-world networks in one and two dimensions with different shortcut densities ϕ, where ϕ=0 represents regular lattice and ϕ=1 represents random network. The effect of dimension, network topology, and specific dissipation mode (bulk or boundary) on the the steady-state critical properties of nondissipative and dissipative avalanches along with all avalanches are analyzed. Though the distributions of all avalanches and nondissipative avalanches display stochastic scaling at ϕ=0 and mean-field scaling at ϕ=1, the dissipative avalanches display nontrivial critical properties at ϕ=0 and 1 in both one and two dimensions. In the small-world regime (2^{-12}≤ϕ≤0.1), the size distributions of different types of avalanches are found to exhibit more than one power-law scaling with different scaling exponents around a crossover toppling size s_{c}. Stochastic scaling is found to occur for ss_{c}. As different scaling forms are found to coexist in a single probability distribution, a coexistence scaling theory on small world network is developed and numerically verified.

5.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-25615073

RESUMO

In the rotational sandpile model, either the clockwise or the anticlockwise toppling rule is assigned to all the lattice sites. It has all the features of a stochastic sandpile model but belongs to a different universality class than the Manna class. A crossover from rotational to Manna universality class is studied by constructing a random rotational sandpile model and assigning randomly clockwise and anticlockwise rotational toppling rules to the lattice sites. The steady state and the respective critical behavior of the present model are found to have a strong and continuous dependence on the fraction of the lattice sites having the anticlockwise (or clockwise) rotational toppling rule. As the anticlockwise and clockwise toppling rules exist in equal proportions, it is found that the model reproduces critical behavior of the Manna model. It is then further evidence of the existence of the Manna class, in contradiction with some recent observations of the nonexistence of the Manna class.

6.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-24483521

RESUMO

A dissipative sandpile model is constructed and studied on small-world networks (SWNs). SWNs are generated by adding extra links between two arbitrary sites of a two-dimensional square lattice with different shortcut densities ϕ. Three regimes are identified: regular lattice (RL) for ϕ≲2(-12), SWN for 2(-12)<ϕ<0.1, and random network (RN) for ϕ≥0.1. In the RL regime, the sandpile dynamics is characterized by the usual Bak, Tang, and Weisenfeld (BTW)-type correlated scaling, whereas in the RN regime it is characterized by mean-field scaling. On SWNs, both scaling behaviors are found to coexist. Small compact avalanches below a certain characteristic size s(c) are found to belong to the BTW universality class, whereas large, sparse avalanches above s(c) are found to belong to the mean-field universality class. A scaling theory for the coexistence of two scaling forms on a SWN is developed and numerically verified. Though finite-size scaling is not valid for the dissipative sandpile model on RLs or on SWNs, it is found to be valid on RNs for the same model. Finite-size scaling on RNs appears to be an outcome of super diffusive sand transport and uncorrelated toppling waves.

SELEÇÃO DE REFERÊNCIAS
DETALHE DA PESQUISA
...