Dynamic interaction between phonons and edge dislocations in LiF

Author:

Li Yang1ORCID,Zheng Zexi2ORCID,Chen Xiang3ORCID,Chen Youping1ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Department of Mechanical and Aerospace Engineering, University of Florida 1 , Gainesville, Florida 32611, USA

2. 2 College of Mechanical Engineering, University of Shanghai for Science and Technology, Shanghai, 200093, China

3. Department of Mechanical Engineering and Engineering Science, University of North Carolina at Charlotte 3 , Charlotte, North Carolina 28223, USA

Abstract

The dynamic interaction between phonons and dislocations in LiF has been studied using molecular dynamics simulations. The simulations have captured the strong dynamic interactions between low-frequency slow transverse acoustic phonons and dislocations that were observed in experiments. Simulation results reveal that the strong dynamic interaction is attributed to resonant interactions between dislocations and slow transverse acoustic phonons. Each dislocation segment is found to possess a set of resonant modes characterized by large-amplitude out-of-phase vibrations of atoms on both sides of the dislocation slip plane. The resonant frequencies associated with these modes exhibit a nearly linear distribution with respect to the mode order. Contrary to previous beliefs, the resonant frequencies of dislocations exhibit only a weak correlation with the dislocation length. Additionally, each dislocation exhibits a dominant resonant mode that corresponds to the strongest vibration mode in response to phonons. This dominant resonant mode is not always the first resonant mode with the lowest frequency. Its specific order depends on the dislocation length. Simulation results have also demonstrated that the resonant modes of dislocations can be influenced by the interactions from neighboring dislocations.

Funder

Division of Civil, Mechanical and Manufacturing Innovation

Division of Materials Research

Office of Advanced Cyberinfrastructure

Publisher

AIP Publishing

Subject

General Physics and Astronomy

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