Shuffling mode competition leads to directionally-anisotropic mobility of faceted {\Sigma}11 boundaries in face centered cubic metals
Megan J. McCarthy, Timothy J. Rupert

TL;DR
This study investigates how faceted {\
Contribution
It reveals that shuffling mode competition causes directionally-anisotropic mobility in {\
Findings
Anisotropic mobility is prevalent in Ni and Cu but not in Al.
Three shuffling modes identified: Shockley, slip plane, and disordered.
Higher temperatures promote transition to disordered shuffling mode.
Abstract
Faceted grain boundaries can migrate in interesting and unexpected ways. For example, faceted {\Sigma}11 <110> tilt grain boundaries were observed to exhibit mobility values that could be strongly dependent on the direction of migration. In order to understand whether this directionally-anisotropic mobility is a general phenomenon and to isolate mechanistic explanations for this behavior, molecular dynamics simulations of bicrystals evolved under an artificial driving force are used to study interface migration for a range of boundary plane inclination angles and temperatures in multiple face centered cubic metals (Al, Ni, and Cu). We find that directionally-anisotropic mobility is active in a large fraction of these boundaries in Ni and Cu and should therefore impact the coarsening of polycrystalline materials. On the other hand, no such anisotropy is observed in any of the Al…
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