On local intrinsic dimensionality of deformation in complex materials
Shuo Zhou, Antoinette Tordesillas, Mehdi Pouragha, James Bailey, and, Howard Bondell

TL;DR
This paper introduces s-LID, a new metric based on Local Intrinsic Dimensionality, to analyze deformation patterns in complex materials, revealing hierarchical structures and the role of grain rotations in failure processes.
Contribution
The study presents a novel s-LID metric for identifying deformation hierarchies, challenging traditional views on shearband formation and highlighting the importance of grain rotations.
Findings
s-LID uncovers a hierarchy of deformation bands during loading.
Microbands and shearbands coexist and evolve differently in failure.
Grain rotations are crucial for the transition to shearband dominance.
Abstract
We propose a new metric called s-LID based on the concept of Local Intrinsic Dimensionality to identify and quantify hierarchies of kinematic patterns in heterogeneous media. s-LID measures how outlying a grain's motion is relative to its s nearest neighbors in displacement state space. To demonstrate the merits of s-LID over the conventional measure of strain, we apply it to data on individual grain motions in a set of deforming granular materials. Several new insights into the evolution of failure are uncovered. First, s-LID reveals a hierarchy of concurrent deformation bands that prevails throughout loading history. These structures vary not only in relative dominance but also spatial and kinematic scales. Second, in the nascent stages of the pre-failure regime, s-LID uncovers a set of system-spanning, criss-crossing bands: microbands for small s and embryonic-shearbands at large s,…
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Taxonomy
TopicsGranular flow and fluidized beds · Force Microscopy Techniques and Applications
