Publication | Open Access
Damage Accumulation in Silica Glass Nanofibers
40
Citations
39
References
2018
Year
EngineeringGlass MaterialSoft MatterMolecular DynamicsGlass-ceramicNanoscale ModelingSample SizeDamage AccumulationSample SizesNanomechanicsMaterials ScienceNanotechnologyGlass FiberNanomaterialsApplied PhysicsMaterial ModelingAmorphous SolidSilica NanofibersMechanics Of Materials
The origin of the brittle-to-ductile transition, experimentally observed in amorphous silica nanofibers as the sample size is reduced, is still debated. Here we investigate the issue by extensive molecular dynamics simulations at low and room temperatures for a broad range of sample sizes, with open and periodic boundary conditions. Our results show that small sample-size enhanced ductility is primarily due to diffuse damage accumulation, that for larger samples leads to brittle catastrophic failure. Surface effects such as boundary fluidization contribute to ductility at room temperature by promoting necking, but are not the main driver of the transition. Our results suggest that the experimentally observed size-induced ductility of silica nanofibers is a manifestation of finite-size criticality, as expected in general for quasi-brittle disordered networks.
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