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2004
Conference Paper
Title
Crack propagation in perfectly ordered and random tiling quasicrystals
Abstract
Numerical experiments have been performed on the propagation of modeI cracks in both ordered and randomized two-dimensional decagonal mode quasicrystals. In particular, the dependence on temperature, applied load and underlying structure has been investigated. The samples are endowed with an atomically sharp crack and subsequently loaded by linear scaling of the displacement field. The response of the system is followed by molecular dynamics simulations. For temperatures be low 30% of the melting temperature Tm the crack velocity grows monotonically with the applied load and the model quasicrystal shows brittle fracture. For large overloads the crack becomes unstable and branches. In this low temperature regime crack tip velocities are in the range of 20-50% of the shear wave velocity vs. For temperatures above 30% on Tm the crack does not remain atomically sharp but blunts spontaneously. The circumvent this and to nevertheless study a sharp crack a linear temperature gradient is established along a strip. From the low temperature regime, where a sharp tip can be stabilized, the crack is driven into a region of elevated temperature. In the range of 70-80% Tm the failure mode of the quasicrystal changes to a void formation process. Thus at low temperatures he crack propagates along crystallographic planes just like in periodic crystals, whereas a glass-like behavior is dominant at high temperatures.