The role of annealing in determining the yielding behavior of glasses under cyclic shear deformation
Himangsu Bhaumik, Giuseppe Foffi, Srikanth Sastry

TL;DR
This study investigates how annealing influences the yielding behavior of glasses under cyclic shear, revealing distinct regimes and linking energy thresholds to dynamical crossover temperatures, with implications for understanding ductile and brittle transitions.
Contribution
The paper provides a comparative analysis of annealing effects on yielding in different glass models using cyclic shear simulations, highlighting the role of energy landscape and crossover temperatures.
Findings
Poorly annealed glasses approach a threshold energy before yielding.
Well annealed glasses show no energy change until abrupt yielding.
Threshold energies relate to dynamical crossover temperatures.
Abstract
Yielding behavior in amorphous solids has been investigated in computer simulations employing uniform and cyclic shear deformation. Recent results characterise yielding as a discontinuous transition, with the degree of annealing of glasses being a significant parameter. Under uniform shear, discontinuous changes in stresses at yielding occur in the high annealing regime, separated from the poor annealing regime in which yielding is gradual. In cyclic shear simulations, relatively poorly annealed glasses become progressively better annealed as the yielding point is approached, with a relatively modest but clear discontinuous change at yielding. To understand better the role of annealing on yielding characteristics, we perform athermal quasistaic cyclic shear simulations of glasses prepared with a wide range of annealing in two qualitatively different systems -- a model of silica (a…
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