English

Yield precursor dislocation avalanches in small crystals: the irreversibility transition

Materials Science 2019-07-18 v3 Statistical Mechanics

Abstract

The transition from elastic to plastic deformation in crystalline metals shares history dependence and scale-invariant avalanche signature with other non-equilibrium systems under external loading: dilute colloidal suspensions, plastically-deformed amorphous solids, granular materials, and dislocation-based simulations of crystals. These other systems exhibit transitions with clear analogies to work hardening and yield stress, with many typically undergoing purely elastic behavior only after 'training' through repeated cyclic loading; studies in these other systems show a power law scaling of the hysteresis loop extent and of the training time as the peak load approaches a so-called reversible-irreversible transition (RIT). We discover here that deformation of small crystals shares these key characteristics: yielding and hysteresis in uniaxial compression experiments of single-crystalline Cu nano- and micro-pillars decay under repeated cyclic loading. The amplitude and decay time of the yield precursor avalanches diverge as the peak stress approaches failure stress for each pillar, with a power law scaling virtually equivalent to RITs in other nonequilibrium systems.

Keywords

Cite

@article{arxiv.1802.04040,
  title  = {Yield precursor dislocation avalanches in small crystals: the irreversibility transition},
  author = {Xiaoyue Ni and Haolu Zhang and Danilo B. Liarte and Louis W. McFaul and Karin A. Dahmen and James P. Sethna and Julia R. Greer},
  journal= {arXiv preprint arXiv:1802.04040},
  year   = {2019}
}

Comments

5 pages, 3 figures

R2 v1 2026-06-23T00:19:12.246Z