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Part A: Materials Science

Origin of unrealistic blunting during atomistic fracture simulations based on MEAM potentials

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Pages 1745-1753 | Received 23 Sep 2013, Accepted 09 Feb 2014, Published online: 14 Apr 2014
 

Abstract

Atomistic simulations based on interatomic potentials have frequently failed to correctly reproduce the brittle fracture of materials, showing an unrealistic blunting. We analyse the origin of the unrealistic blunting during atomistic simulations by modified embedded-atom method (MEAM) potentials for experimentally well-known brittle materials such as bcc tungsten and diamond silicon. The radial cut-off which has been thought to give no influence on MEAM calculations is found to have a decisive effect on the crack propagation behaviour. Extending both cut-off distance and truncation range can prevent the unrealistic blunting, reproducing many well-known fracture behaviour which have been difficult to reproduce. The result provides a guideline for future atomistic simulations that focus on various fracture-related phenomena including the failure of metallic-covalent bonding material systems using MEAM potentials.

Funding

This work was financially supported by the National Research Foundation [grant number 2011-0010033] and the Ministry of Trade, Industry & Energy [grant number 10041589] of Korea.

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