Predicting the dislocation nucleation rate as a function of temperature and stress

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Predicting the dislocation nucleation rate as a function of temperature and stress is crucial for understanding the plastic deformation of nanoscale crystalline materials. However, the limited time scale of molecular dynamics simulations makes it very difficult to predict the dislocation nucleation rate at experimentally relevant conditions. We recently develop an approach to predict the dislocation nucleation rate based on the Becker-Doring theory of nucleation and umbrella sampling simulations. The results reveal very large activation entropies, which originated from the anharmonic effects, that can alter the nucleation rate by many orders of magnitude. Here we discuss the thermodynamics and algorithms underlying these calculations in greater detail. In particular, we prove that the activation Helmholtz free energy equals the activation Gibbs free energy in the thermodynamic limit and explain the large difference in the activation entropies in the constant stress and constant strain ensembles. We also discuss the origin of the large activation entropies for dislocation nucleation, along with previous theoretical estimates of the activation entropy.
Publisher
CAMBRIDGE UNIV PRESS
Issue Date
2011-09
Language
English
Article Type
Article
Keywords

MOLECULAR-DYNAMICS; ELASTIC LIMIT; THERMODYNAMICS; ACTIVATION; CRYSTALS; ENTROPY; METALS; STRENGTH; COPPER; SIMULATIONS

Citation

JOURNAL OF MATERIALS RESEARCH, v.26, no.18, pp.2335 - 2354

ISSN
0884-2914
DOI
10.1557/jmr.2011.275
URI
http://hdl.handle.net/10203/102496
Appears in Collection
ME-Journal Papers(저널논문)
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