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Autori principali: Mousavi, Hojjat, Stupkiewicz, Stanisław, Ustrzycka, Aneta
Natura: Preprint
Pubblicazione: 2026
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Accesso online:https://arxiv.org/abs/2603.25617
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author Mousavi, Hojjat
Stupkiewicz, Stanisław
Ustrzycka, Aneta
author_facet Mousavi, Hojjat
Stupkiewicz, Stanisław
Ustrzycka, Aneta
contents This study investigates the influence of crystallographic orientation on fracture behavior and the resulting mechanical anisotropy in a Fe55Ni19Cr26 alloy crystal containing radiation-induced defects, using molecular dynamics (MD) simulations. Crack propagation is analyzed in irradiated samples with three selected high-symmetry crystallographic orientations to show how radiation-induced defects modify local deformation mechanisms and amplify mechanical anisotropy. The investigation focuses on the anisotropic nature of the ductile-to-brittle transition (DBT) driven by radiation-induced defects by simulating fracture behavior under tensile loading. Fracture resistance is quantitatively evaluated using a traction-separation (T-S) approach to extract the atomic-scale fracture energy under realistic defect conditions. The results reveal a strong crystallographic orientation dependence in the evolution of deformation and fracture behavior during DBT. The crystal lattice orientation governs dislocation activity and defect interactions, which in turn regulate local plasticity mechanisms, strain localization, slip system activation, and fracture resistance, thereby driving the development and enhancement of mechanical anisotropy in irradiated materials. It is further shown that radiation-induced embrittlement cannot be explained solely by defect accumulation, but rather by orientation-sensitive interactions among dislocations, defects, and fracture process zones. A key novelty of this work lies in integrating radiation-induced defect evolution with orientation-dependent fracture within an atomistic T-S analysis, enabling quantitative assessment of atomic-scale fracture resistance under realistic defect conditions.
format Preprint
id arxiv_https___arxiv_org_abs_2603_25617
institution arXiv
publishDate 2026
record_format arxiv
spellingShingle Molecular dynamics study of the role of anisotropy in radiation-driven embrittlement
Mousavi, Hojjat
Stupkiewicz, Stanisław
Ustrzycka, Aneta
Materials Science
This study investigates the influence of crystallographic orientation on fracture behavior and the resulting mechanical anisotropy in a Fe55Ni19Cr26 alloy crystal containing radiation-induced defects, using molecular dynamics (MD) simulations. Crack propagation is analyzed in irradiated samples with three selected high-symmetry crystallographic orientations to show how radiation-induced defects modify local deformation mechanisms and amplify mechanical anisotropy. The investigation focuses on the anisotropic nature of the ductile-to-brittle transition (DBT) driven by radiation-induced defects by simulating fracture behavior under tensile loading. Fracture resistance is quantitatively evaluated using a traction-separation (T-S) approach to extract the atomic-scale fracture energy under realistic defect conditions. The results reveal a strong crystallographic orientation dependence in the evolution of deformation and fracture behavior during DBT. The crystal lattice orientation governs dislocation activity and defect interactions, which in turn regulate local plasticity mechanisms, strain localization, slip system activation, and fracture resistance, thereby driving the development and enhancement of mechanical anisotropy in irradiated materials. It is further shown that radiation-induced embrittlement cannot be explained solely by defect accumulation, but rather by orientation-sensitive interactions among dislocations, defects, and fracture process zones. A key novelty of this work lies in integrating radiation-induced defect evolution with orientation-dependent fracture within an atomistic T-S analysis, enabling quantitative assessment of atomic-scale fracture resistance under realistic defect conditions.
title Molecular dynamics study of the role of anisotropy in radiation-driven embrittlement
topic Materials Science
url https://arxiv.org/abs/2603.25617