9,344 research outputs found
Plastic response of a 2D amorphous solid to quasi-static shear : I - Transverse particle diffusion and phenomenology of dissipative events
We perform extensive simulations of a 2D LJ glass subjected to quasi-static
shear deformation at T=0. We analyze the distribution of non-affine
displacements in terms of contributions of plastic, irreversible events, and
elastic, reversible motions. From this, we extract information about
correlations between plastic events and about the elastic non-affine noise.
Moreover, we find that non-affine motion is essentially diffusive, with a
clearly size-dependent diffusion constant. These results, supplemented by close
inspection of the evolving patterns of the non-affine tangent displacement
field, lead us to propose a phenomenology of plasticity in such amorphous
media. It can be schematized in terms of elastic loading and irreversible flips
of small, randomly located shear transformation zones, elastically coupled via
their quadrupolar fields
Strain localization in a shear transformation zone model for amorphous solids
We model a sheared disordered solid using the theory of Shear Transformation
Zones (STZs). In this mean-field continuum model the density of zones is
governed by an effective temperature that approaches a steady state value as
energy is dissipated. We compare the STZ model to simulations by Shi, et
al.(Phys. Rev. Lett. 98 185505 2007), finding that the model generates
solutions that fit the data,exhibit strain localization, and capture important
features of the localization process. We show that perturbations to the
effective temperature grow due to an instability in the transient dynamics, but
unstable systems do not always develop shear bands. Nonlinear energy
dissipation processes interact with perturbation growth to determine whether a
material exhibits strain localization. By estimating the effects of these
interactions, we derive a criterion that determines which materials exhibit
shear bands based on the initial conditions alone. We also show that the shear
band width is not set by an inherent diffusion length scale but instead by a
dynamical scale that depends on the imposed strain rate.Comment: 8 figures, references added, typos correcte
CP Tagged Decays at SuperBaBar
We explore the possibility of measuring the CKM parameter gamma using CP
tagged decays at a very high luminosity e+e- B Factory. A new collider capable
of integrating as much as 10 inverse attobarns per year is being discussed as a
possible future for SLAC beyond the current PEP-II program, and could also be
in the future of KEK. In two years of operation, it could be possible for a
successor to BaBar or Belle to accumulate a sample of one million CP tagged B
decays. We find that a theoretically clean extraction of gamma with uncertainty
less than 5 degrees may be achievable in the analysis of such a data set.Comment: 14 pages, 4 figures; minimal revisions for version to appear in
Physical Review D, all formulas and conclusions unchange
Dissipative Visco-plastic Deformation in Dynamic Fracture: Tip Blunting and Velocity Selection
Dynamic fracture in a wide class of materials reveals "fracture energy"
much larger than the expected nominal surface energy due to the
formation of two fresh surfaces. Moreover, the fracture energy depends on the
crack velocity, . We show that a simple dynamical theory of
visco-plasticity coupled to asymptotic pure linear-elasticity provides a
possible explanation to the above phenomena. The theory predicts tip blunting
characterized by a dynamically determined crack tip radius of curvature. In
addition, we demonstrate velocity selection for cracks in fixed-grip strip
geometry accompanied by the identification of and its velocity
dependence.Comment: 4 pages, 1 figures; presentation improved, refs. changed, figure
omitte
Rate dependent shear bands in a shear transformation zone model of amorphous solids
We use Shear Transformation Zone (STZ) theory to develop a deformation map
for amorphous solids as a function of the imposed shear rate and initial
material preparation. The STZ formulation incorporates recent simulation
results [Haxton and Liu, PRL 99 195701 (2007)] showing that the steady state
effective temperature is rate dependent. The resulting model predicts a wide
range of deformation behavior as a function of the initial conditions,
including homogeneous deformation, broad shear bands, extremely thin shear
bands, and the onset of material failure. In particular, the STZ model predicts
homogeneous deformation for shorter quench times and lower strain rates, and
inhomogeneous deformation for longer quench times and higher strain rates. The
location of the transition between homogeneous and inhomogeneous flow on the
deformation map is determined in part by the steady state effective
temperature, which is likely material dependent. This model also suggests that
material failure occurs due to a runaway feedback between shear heating and the
local disorder, and provides an explanation for the thickness of shear bands
near the onset of material failure. We find that this model, which resolves
dynamics within a sheared material interface, predicts that the stress weakens
with strain much more rapidly than a similar model which uses a single state
variable to specify internal dynamics on the interface.Comment: 10 pages, 13 figures, corrected typos, added section on rate
strengthening vs. rate weakening material
Rearrangements and Dilatancy for Sheared Dense Materials
Constitutive equations are proposed for dense materials, based on the
identification of two types of free-volume activated rearrangements associated
to shear and compaction. Two situations are studied: the case of an amorphous
solid in a stress-strain test, and the case of a lubricant in tribology test.
Varying parameters, strain softening, shear thinning, and stick-slip motion can
be observed.Comment: 4 pages, 3 figure
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