4.6 Article

Brittle-to-ductile transitions in glasses: Roles of soft defects and loading geometry

Journal

MRS BULLETIN
Volume 46, Issue 10, Pages 902-914

Publisher

SPRINGER HEIDELBERG
DOI: 10.1557/s43577-021-00171-8

Keywords

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Funding

  1. Simons Foundation for the Cracking the Glass Problem Collaboration Award [348126]
  2. NWO (Vidi) [680-47-554/3259]
  3. Harold Perlman Family
  4. Ben May Center for Chemical Theory and Computation

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Understanding the fracture toughness of glasses is crucial for science and technology. Atomistic simulations show that varying parameters such as cooling rate and loading geometry can affect the toughness of glasses. Soft defects and loading geometry play significant roles in the toughness of glasses.
Understanding the fracture toughness of glasses is of prime importance for science and technology. We study it here using extensive atomistic simulations in which the interaction potential, glass transition cooling rate, and loading geometry are systematically varied, mimicking a broad range of experimentally accessible properties. Glasses' non-equilibrium mechanical disorder is quantified through A(g), the dimensionless prefactor of the universal spectrum of non-phononic excitations, which measures the abundance of soft glassy defects that affect plastic deformability. We show that while a brittle-to-ductile transition might be induced by reducing the cooling rate, leading to a reduction in A(g), iso-A(g) glasses are either brittle or ductile depending on the degree of Poisson contraction under unconstrained uniaxial tension. Eliminating Poisson contraction using constrained tension reveals that iso-A(g) glasses feature similar toughness, and that varying A(g) under these conditions results in significant toughness variation. Our results highlight the roles played by both soft defects and loading geometry (which affects the activation of defects) in the toughness of glasses.

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