When nanoparticles (NPs) collide with low velocities, they interact elastically in the sense that-besides their fusion caused by their mutual van-der-Waals attraction-no defects are generated. We investigate the minimum velocity, vc, necessary for generating defects and inducing plasticity in the NP. The determination of this elastic-plastic threshold is of prime importance for modeling the behavior of granular matter. Using the generic Lennard-Jones interaction potential, we find vc to increase strongly with decreasing radius. Current models do not agree with our simulations, but we provide a model based on dislocation emission in the contact zone that quantitatively describes the size dependence of the elastic-plastic transition.
CITATION STYLE
Millán, E. N., Tramontina, D. R., Urbassek, H. M., & Bringa, E. M. (2016). The elastic-plastic transition in nanoparticle collisions. Physical Chemistry Chemical Physics, 18(5), 3423–3429. https://doi.org/10.1039/c5cp05150a
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