48 research outputs found
Rheology and Shear Band Suppression in Particle and Chain Mixtures
Using numerical simulations, we consider an amorphous particle mixture which
exhibits shear banding, and find that the addition of even a small fraction of
chains strongly enhances the material strength, creating pronounced overshoot
features in the stress-strain curves. The strengthening occurs in the case
where the chains are initially perpendicular to the shear direction, leading to
a suppression of the shear band. For large strain, the chains migrate to the
region where a shear band forms, resulting in a stress drop. The alignment of
the chains by the shear bands results in a Bauschinger-like effect for
subsequent reversed shear. Many of these features are captured in a simple
model of a single chain being pulled through a viscous material. Our results
are also useful for providing insights into methods of controlling and
strengthening granular materials against failure
Transport anisotropy as a probe of the interstitial vortex state in superconductors with artificial pinning arrays
We show using simulations that when interstitial vortices are present in superconductors with periodic pinning arrays, the transport in two perpendicular directions can be anisotropic. The degree of the anisotropy varies as a function of field due to the fact that the interstitial vortex lattice has distinct orderings at different matching fields. The anisotropy is most pronounced at the matching fields but persists at incommensurate fields, and it is most prominent for triangular, honeycomb, and kagome pinning arrays. Square pinning arrays can also show anisotropic transport at certain fields in spite of the fact that the perpendicular directions of the square pinning array are identical. We show that the anisotropy results from distinct vortex dynamical states and that although the critical depinning force may be lower in one direction, the vortex velocity above depinning may also be lower in the same direction for ranges of external drives where both directions are depinned. For honeycomb and kagome pinning arrays, the anisotropy can show multiple reversals as a function of field. We argue that when the pinning sites can be multiply occupied such that no interstitial vortices are present, the anisotropy is strongly reduced or absent
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Random organization and plastic depinning
We provide evidence that the general phenomenon of plastic depinning can be described as an absorbing phase transition, and shows the same features as the random organization which was recently studied in periodically driven particle systems [L. Corte, Nature Phys. 4, 420 (2008)]. In the plastic flow system, the pinned regime corresponds to the absorbing state and the moving state corresponds to the fluctuating state. When an external force is suddenly applied, the system eventually organizes into one of these two states with a time scale that diverges as a power law at a nonequilibrium transition. We propose a simple experiment to test for this transition in systems with random disorder
Dynamic Phases, Pinning, and Pattern Formation for Driven Dislocation Assemblies
We examine driven dislocation assemblies and show that they can exhibit a set of dynamical phases remarkably similar to those of driven systems with quenched disorder such as vortices in superconductors, magnetic domain walls, and charge density wave materials. These phases include pinned-jammed, fluctuating, and dynamically ordered states, and each produces distinct dislocation patterns as well as specific features in the noise fluctuations and transport properties. Our work suggests that many of the results established for systems with quenched disorder undergoing plastic depinning transitions can be applied to dislocation systems, providing a new approach for understanding pattern formation and dynamics in these systems