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Stochastic Dynamics of Crystal Defects

Posted By: Underaglassmoon
Stochastic Dynamics of Crystal Defects

Stochastic Dynamics of Crystal Defects
Springer | Physics | Aug. 14 2015 | ISBN-10: 3319200186 | 100 pages | pdf | 4 mb

by Sergey Ermakov (Author), Alexandr Beletskii (Author), Oleg Eismont (Author), Vladimir Nikolaev (Author)
Nominated as an outstanding Ph.D. thesis by the Imperial College London, UK


From the Back Cover
This thesis is concerned with establishing a rigorous, modern theory of the stochastic and dissipative forces on crystal defects, which remain poorly understood despite their importance in any temperature dependent micro-structural process such as the ductile to brittle transition or irradiation damage.
The author first uses novel molecular dynamics simulations to parameterise an efficient, stochastic and discrete dislocation model that allows access to experimental time and length scales. Simulated trajectories are in excellent agreement with experiment. The author also applies modern methods of multiscale analysis to extract novel bounds on the transport properties of these many body systems.
Despite their successes in coarse graining, existing theories are found unable to explain stochastic defect dynamics. To resolve this, the author defines crystal defects through projection operators, without any recourse to elasticity. By rigorous dimensional reduction, explicit analytical forms are derived for the stochastic forces acting on crystal defects, allowing new quantitative insight into the role of thermal fluctuations in crystal plasticity.

About the Author
First Degree in Physics at Mansfield College, Oxford University.
Masters and PhD in Theory and Simulation of Materials at Imperial College, London under Prof Adrian Sutton FRS and Prof Sergei Dudarev. Currently fusion research fellow at the Culham Centre for Fusion Energy.

Number of Illustrations and Tables
5 illus., 32 in colour

Topics
Solid State Physics
Statistical Physics, Dynamical Systems and Complexity
Numerical and Computational Physics