Origin of scale-free intermittency in structural first-order phase transitions
Francisco J. Perez-Reche, Carles Triguero, Giovanni Zanzotto, Lev, Truskinovsky

TL;DR
This paper explains the origin of scale-free avalanche dynamics in cyclically driven first-order phase transitions, attributing it to annealed disorder from transformation-induced slip that co-evolves with the phase change, leading to criticality without external tuning.
Contribution
It introduces a model where annealed disorder from phase transition-induced slip causes scale-free behavior, highlighting the role of elastic interactions and disorder properties in criticality.
Findings
Disorder from slip co-evolves with phase transformation.
Long-range elastic interactions influence universality class.
Heavy-tailed disorder distribution does not affect criticality.
Abstract
A salient feature of cyclically driven first-order phase transformations in crystals is their scale-free avalanche dynamics. This behavior has been linked to the presence of a classical critical point but the mechanism leading to criticality without extrinsic tuning remains unexplained. Here we show that the source of scaling in such systems is an annealed disorder associated with transformation-induced slip which co-evolves with the phase transformation, thus ensuring the crossing of a critical manifold. Our conclusions are based on a model where annealed disorder emerges in the form of a random field induced by the phase transition. Such disorder exhibits super-transient chaotic behavior under thermal loading, obeys a heavy-tailed distribution and exhibits long-range spatial correlations. We show that the universality class is affected by the long-range character of elastic…
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