Shapes and velocity relaxation of dislocation avalanches in Au and Nb single crystals
Gregory Sparks, Robert Maass

TL;DR
This study investigates dislocation avalanche dynamics in gold and niobium crystals, revealing material-specific differences in velocity, shape, and relaxation that challenge universal models and highlight the influence of dislocation types.
Contribution
It provides a comparative analysis of avalanche behaviors in FCC gold and BCC niobium, showing deviations from mean-field predictions and emphasizing material-specific dynamics.
Findings
Niobium exhibits lower peak velocities and slower relaxation than gold.
Avalanche shapes in gold align with mean-field depinning models, unlike niobium.
Material-specific dislocation mobility influences avalanche shape differences.
Abstract
We capture the spatiotemporal velocity dynamics of dislocation avalanches in face-centered cubic (FCC) gold and body-centered cubic (BCC) niobium crystals by compression testing of cylindrical microcrystals. In niobium, avalanche peak-velocities are over one order of magnitude lower, have distinctly rougher avalanche shapes, and relax more slowly to zero velocity than in gold. The avalanche dynamics (including averaged avalanche shapes) can be described reasonably well by mean-field predictions for avalanches near the depinning transition in the case of gold, but not for niobium. A detailed analysis shows consistent deviations (non-trivial exponents) from the predicted functional forms for both gold and niobium if the exponent that describes the velocity decay of the shape function is treated as a free parameter. While the avalanche size statistics and related scaling exponents are…
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Taxonomy
TopicsTheoretical and Computational Physics · Microstructure and mechanical properties · nanoparticles nucleation surface interactions
