Issue 39, 2024

Thermally activated intermittent flow in amorphous solids

Abstract

Using mean field theory and a mesoscale elastoplastic model, we analyze the steady state shear rheology of thermally activated amorphous solids. At sufficiently high temperature and driving rates, flow is continuous and described by well-established rheological flow laws such as Herschel–Bulkley and logarithmic rate dependence. However, we find that these flow laws change in the regime of intermittent flow, where collective events no longer overlap and serrated flow becomes pronounced. In this regime, we identify a thermal activation stress scale, xa(T,[small gamma, Greek, dot above]), that wholly captures the effect of driving rate [small gamma, Greek, dot above] and temperature T on average flow stress, stress drop (avalanche) size and correlation lengths. Different rheological regimes are summarized in a dynamic phase diagram for the amorphous yielding transition. Theoretical predictions call for a need to re-examine the rheology of very slowly sheared amorphous matter much below the glass transition.

Graphical abstract: Thermally activated intermittent flow in amorphous solids

Article information

Article type
Paper
Submitted
22 May 2024
Accepted
09 Sep 2024
First published
18 Sep 2024

Soft Matter, 2024,20, 7891-7913

Thermally activated intermittent flow in amorphous solids

D. J. Korchinski and J. Rottler, Soft Matter, 2024, 20, 7891 DOI: 10.1039/D4SM00619D

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