Ultrafast visualization of incipient plasticity in dynamically compressed matter

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Abstract

Plasticity is ubiquitous and plays a critical role in material deformation and damage; it inherently involves the atomistic length scale and picosecond time scale. A fundamental understanding of the elastic-plastic deformation transition, in particular, incipient plasticity, has been a grand challenge in high-pressure and high-strain-rate environments, impeded largely by experimental limitations on spatial and temporal resolution. Here, we report femtosecond MeV electron diffraction measurements visualizing the three-dimensional (3D) response of single-crystal aluminum to the ultrafast laser-induced compression. We capture lattice transitioning from a purely elastic to a plastically relaxed state within 5 ps, after reaching an elastic limit of ~25 GPa. Our results allow the direct determination of dislocation nucleation and transport that constitute the underlying defect kinetics of incipient plasticity. Large-scale molecular dynamics simulations show good agreement with the experiment and provide an atomic-level description of the dislocation-mediated plasticity.

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Mo, M., Tang, M., Chen, Z., Peterson, J. R., Shen, X., Baldwin, J. K., … Glenzer, S. (2022). Ultrafast visualization of incipient plasticity in dynamically compressed matter. Nature Communications, 13(1). https://doi.org/10.1038/s41467-022-28684-z

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