The influence of surface stress on dislocation emission from sharp and blunt cracks in f.c.c. metals
J. Schiotz, A. E. Carlsson

TL;DR
This study uses computer simulations to explore how surface stress influences dislocation emission from cracks in f.c.c. metals, revealing that surface stress can significantly increase fracture toughness by promoting dislocation emission.
Contribution
It demonstrates that surface stress, arising from many-body atomic interactions, affects crack stability and dislocation emission, challenging existing ductile/brittle criteria.
Findings
Surface stress impacts dislocation emission from crack tips.
Sharp cracks are stable in platinum and gold but unstable in other metals.
Blunting cracks reduces the critical stress for dislocation emission by up to 20%.
Abstract
We use computer simulations to study the behavior of atomically sharp and blunted cracks in various f.c.c. metals. The simulations use effective medium potentials which contain many-body interactions. We find that when using potentials representing platinum and gold a sharp crack is stable with respect to the emission of a dislocation from the crack tip, whereas for all other metals studied the sharp crack is unstable. This result cannot be explained by existing criteria for the intrinsic ductile/brittle behavior of crack tips, but is probably caused by surface stresses. When the crack is no longer atomically sharp dislocation emission becomes easier in all the studied metals. The effect is relatively strong; the critical stress intensity factor for emission to occur is reduced by up to 20%. This behavior appears to be caused by the surface stress near the crack tip. The surface stress…
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Taxonomy
TopicsSurface and Thin Film Phenomena · Semiconductor materials and interfaces · Ion-surface interactions and analysis
