Picosecond amorphization of SiO 2 stishovite under tension
Author(s) -
Masaaki Misawa,
Emina Ryuo,
Kimiko Yoshida,
Rajiv K. Kalia,
Aiichiro Nakano,
Norimasa Nishiyama,
Fuyuki Shimojo,
Priya Vashishta,
Fumihiro Wakai
Publication year - 2017
Publication title -
science advances
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 5.928
H-Index - 146
ISSN - 2375-2548
DOI - 10.1126/sciadv.1602339
Subject(s) - stishovite , picosecond , materials science , mineralogy , nanotechnology , chemical physics , optics , geology , quartz , chemistry , composite material , physics , laser
It is extremely difficult to realize two conflicting properties—high hardness and toughness—in one material. Nano-polycrystalline stishovite, recently synthesized from Earth-abundant silica glass, proved to be a super-hard, ultra-tough material, which could provide sustainable supply of high-performance ceramics. Our quantum molecular dynamics simulations show that stishovite amorphizes rapidly on the order of picosecond under tension in front of a crack tip. We find a displacive amorphization mechanism that only involves short-distance collective motions of atoms, thereby facilitating the rapid transformation. The two-step amorphization pathway involves an intermediate state akin to experimentally suggested “high-density glass polymorphs” before eventually transforming to normal glass. The rapid amorphization can catch up with, screen, and self-heal a fast-moving crack. This new concept of fast amorphization toughening likely operates in other pressure-synthesized hard solids.
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