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Brittle and ductile character of amorphous solids

journal contribution
posted on 2024-11-02, 02:50 authored by Miguel Lagos, Rajarshi DasRajarshi Das
Common silicate glasses are among the most brittle of the materials. However, on warming beyond the glass transition temperature Tg glass transforms into one of the most plastic known materials. Bulk metallic glasses exhibit similar phenomenology, indicating that it rests on the disordered structure instead on the nature of the chemical bonds. The micromechanics of a solid with bulk amorphous structure is examined in order to determine the most basic conditions the system must satisfy to be able of plastic flow. The equations for the macroscopic flow, consistent with the constrictions imposed at the atomic scale, prove that a randomly structured bulk material must be either a brittle solid or a liquid, but not a ductile solid. The theory permits to identify a single parameter determining the difference between the brittle solid and the liquid. However, the system is able of perfect ductility if the plastic flow proceeds in two dimensional plane layers that concentrate the strain. Insight is gained on the nature of the glass transition, and the phase occurring between glass transition and melting.

History

Journal

Advances in Applied Mathematics and Mechanics

Volume

8

Issue

3

Start page

485

End page

498

Total pages

14

Publisher

Cambridge University Press

Place published

United Kingdom

Language

English

Copyright

© 2016 Global Science Press.

Former Identifier

2006073506

Esploro creation date

2020-06-22

Fedora creation date

2017-10-20

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