On the Origin of Spatial Stress Correlations in Disordered Media
ORAL
Abstract
It has been recently shown1,2 that coarse-grained stress fields in amorphous media exhibit long range spatial correlations. It has been proposed3 that these correlations stem from the nature of the dynamical processes that occur during the formation of these systems. Using numerical simulations of simple lattice-based models we show that the minimal ingredients for the emergence of stress correlations are mechanical equilibrium and some form of disorder, and therefore stress correlations are not a consequence of dynamical processes. In addition, we demonstrate that any arbitrarily small degree of disorder leads to the emergence of stress correlations, and that positional disorder is not a necessary ingredient for their emergence. Finally, we introduce a lattice model in which the functional form of the spatial decay of stress correlations can be exactly derived.
[1] S. Chowdhury, S. Abraham, T. Hudson, and P. Harrowell, The J. of Chem. Phys. 144, 124508 (2016)
[2] B. Wu, T. Iwashita and T. Egami, Phys. Rev. E 91, 032301 (2015)
[3] A. Lemaître, The J. of Chem. Phys. 143, 164515 (2015)
[1] S. Chowdhury, S. Abraham, T. Hudson, and P. Harrowell, The J. of Chem. Phys. 144, 124508 (2016)
[2] B. Wu, T. Iwashita and T. Egami, Phys. Rev. E 91, 032301 (2015)
[3] A. Lemaître, The J. of Chem. Phys. 143, 164515 (2015)
*This research is funded and supported by the Delta institue of Theoretical Physics.
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Presenters
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Robbie Rens
- Institute of Physics, University of Amsterdam