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Atomistic Characterization of Dislocation
Nucleation and Fracture
One of the central objectives of multiscale materials modeling is to
develop and apply simulation techniques to uncover atomic-level
mechanisms without the significant limitations on system size and
simulation time inherent to purely atomistic methods. In this context,
I have made two contributions. I developed an interatomic potential
finite element method (IPFEM) to study homogeneous dislocation
nucleation by nano-indentation. The implementation of IPFEM
facilitates simulations at length scales that are large compared to
atomic dimensions, while remaining faithful to the nonlinear
interatomic interactions. Aided by a shear localization criterion,
which was also calculated from the interatomic potential, I was able
to provide atomically accurate predictions about when, where and how a
dislocation nucleates beneath a nanoindenter. My second contribution
was to extend the time-scale of atomistic simulation of fracture by
adopting several reaction pathway sampling schemes. I studied the
thermally activated processes at a crack tip that control the brittle
to ductile transitions in solids. Using the sampling scheme of the
nudged elastic band method, atomistic pathways were identified that
characterize dislocation loop emission in Cu, cleavage crack extension
in Si, and water-assisted bond ruptures in a silica nanorod. The
associated energetics and atomistic geometries were quantified, thus
making contact with previous continuum analyses and experimental
observations
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