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The role of weakest links and system size scaling in multiscale modeling of stochastic plasticity

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abstract

Plastic deformation of crystalline and amorphous matter often involves intermittent local strain burst events. To understand the physical background of the phenomenon a minimal stochastic mesoscopic model was introduced, where microstructural details are represented by a fluctuating local yielding threshold. In the present paper, we propose a method for determining this yield stress distribution by lower scale discrete dislocation dynamics simulations and using a weakest link argument. The success of scale-linking is demonstrated on the stress-strain curves obtained by the resulting mesoscopic and the discrete dislocation models. As shown by various scaling relations they are statistically equivalent and behave identically in the thermodynamic limit. The proposed technique is expected to be applicable for different microstructures and amorphous materials, too.

years

2025 1

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UNVERDICTED 1

representative citing papers

The line bundle regime and the scale-dependence of continuum dislocation dynamics

cond-mat.mtrl-sci · 2025-10-02 · unverdicted · novelty 6.0

A resolution-dependent formulation of dislocation density fields based on orientation fluctuation statistics shows the line bundle closure accurately describes data for coarse-graining lengths up to half the dislocation spacing while the maximum entropy closure does not.

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  • The line bundle regime and the scale-dependence of continuum dislocation dynamics cond-mat.mtrl-sci · 2025-10-02 · unverdicted · none · ref 21 · internal anchor

    A resolution-dependent formulation of dislocation density fields based on orientation fluctuation statistics shows the line bundle closure accurately describes data for coarse-graining lengths up to half the dislocation spacing while the maximum entropy closure does not.