Discontinuous instabilities in disordered solids

Author:

Xu Ding1ORCID,Zhang Shiyun1ORCID,Liu Andrea J.23ORCID,Nagel Sidney R.4ORCID,Xu Ning1ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Hefei National Research Center for Physical Sciences at the Microscale, Chinese Academy of Sciences Key Laboratory of Microscale Magnetic Resonance, and Department of Physics, University of Science and Technology of China, Hefei 230026, People’s Republic of China

2. Department of Physics and Astronomy, University of Pennsylvania, Philadelphia, PA 19104

3. Center for Computational Biology, Flatiron Institute, Simons Foundation, New York, NY 10010

4. Department of Physics and James Franck and Enrico Fermi Institutes, University of Chicago, Chicago, IL 60637

Abstract

Under a sufficiently large load, a solid material will flow via rearrangements, where particles change neighbors. Such plasticity is most easily described in the athermal, quasistatic limit of zero temperature and infinitesimal loading rate, where rearrangements occur only when the system becomes mechanically unstable. For disordered solids, the instabilities marking the onset of rearrangements have long been believed to be fold instabilities, in which an energy barrier disappears and the frequency of a normal mode of vibration vanishes continuously. Here, we report that there exists another, anomalous, type of instability caused by the breaking of a “stabilizing bond,” whose removal creates an unstable vibrational mode. For commonly studied systems, such as those with harmonic finite-range interparticle interactions, such “discontinuous instabilities” are not only inevitable, they often dominate the modes of failure. Stabilizing bonds are a subset of all the bonds in the system and are prevalent in disordered solids generally. Although they do not trigger discontinuous instabilities in systems with vanishing stiffness at the interaction cutoff, they are, even in those cases, local indicators of incipient mechanical failure. They therefore provide an accurate structural predictor of instabilities not only of the discontinuous type but of the fold type as well.

Funder

MOST | National Natural Science Foundation of China

Simons Foundation for the collaboration Cracking the Glass Problem

Publisher

Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences

Subject

Multidisciplinary

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