Séminaire Institut

Vendredi 15 Juin 2018 à 11h00.

The nonequilibrium physics of amorphous materials: collective dynamics, emergent behavior, and memory effects


Joerg Rottler
(University of British Columbia, Vancouver, Canada)

Salle de séminaire, Lippman

Invité(e) par
David Rodney
Axe : Théorie et modélisation
présentera en 1 heure :

''How does an amorphous solid flow? The rheomechanical properties of glassy materials (foams, emulsions, gels, colloidal pastes, amorphous metals and polymers) form the basis of their many applications, yet we lack a complete understanding of the underlying atomic scale plasticity mechanisms, nor do we have robust statistical theories of these strongly driven systems that describe the emergence of macroscopic flow heterogeneities. This talk will show how particle scale simulations provide insight into the properties and interactions of localized plastic events. We then show how mesoscale elastoplastic models and mean field theories can be constructed from the fundamental physics of such shear transformations. These models have greatly improved our current understanding of the critical behaviour near the yielding transition, the origin of memory effects in the nonequilibrium glassy state, and possible mechanisms of shear localization during plastic deformation.''



Scroll To Top