Formation and growth of shear bands in glasses: existence of an underlying directed percolation transition
Gaurav Prakash Shrivastav, Pinaki Chaudhuri, and J\"urgen Horbach

TL;DR
This paper reveals that shear band formation in glasses is linked to a directed percolation transition, discovered through molecular dynamics simulations, providing new insights into the microscopic mechanisms of strain localization.
Contribution
It demonstrates that shear banding in glasses corresponds to a directed percolation transition, a novel finding connecting microscopic dynamics to a critical phase transition.
Findings
Shear band formation is associated with a directed percolation transition.
Percolation transition occurs at a critical strain in glassy systems.
Long-lived shear bands develop at low shear rates near the yielding threshold.
Abstract
The response of glasses to mechanical loading often leads to the formation of inhomogeneous flow patterns that strongly affect materials properties. Among them, shear bands are ubiquitous in a wide variety of materials, ranging from soft matter systems to metallic alloys. Shear banding is associated with strain localization, i.e. the deformation of the sheared glassy solid is localized in space in form of band-like structures. These structures are often precursors to catastrophic failure, implying that a proper understanding of the underlying mechanisms could lead to the design of smarter materials. However, despite its importance in material science, the microscopic origin of shear banding in glassy materials is only poorly understood. Here, the formation of shear banding in glassy systems is revealed by non-equilibrium molecular dynamics simulations (NEMD) of a binary Lennard-Jones…
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