Quantitative prediction of the fracture toughness of amorphous carbon from atomic-scale simulations

Abstract

Fracture is the ultimate source of failure of amorphous carbon (a-C) films, however it is challenging to measure fracture properties of a-C from nano-indentation tests and results of reported experiments are not consistent. Here, we use atomic-scale simulations to make quantitative and mechanistic predictions on fracture of a-C. Systematic large-scale K-field controlled atomic-scale simulations of crack propagation are performed for a-C samples with densities of =2.5, \, 3.0 \, and 3.5~g/cm3 created by liquid quenches for a range of quench rates Tq = 10 - 1000~K/ps. The simulations show that the crack propagates by nucleation, growth, and coalescence of voids. Distances of ≈ 1\, nm between nucleated voids result in a brittle-like fracture toughness. We use a crack growth criterion proposed by Drugan, Rice \& Sham to estimate steady-state fracture toughness based on our short crack-length fracture simulations. Fracture toughness values of 2.4-6.0\,MPam for initiation and 3-10\,MPam for the steady-state crack growth are within the experimentally reported range. These findings demonstrate that atomic-scale simulations can provide quantitatively predictive results even for fracture of materials with a ductile crack propagation mechanism.

0

Turn this paper into a lesson

ArcXiv compiles a structured reading guide from this paper's metadata: plain-English importance, contributions, prerequisite concepts, which sections to read first, flashcards, and a quiz. Grounded in the abstract, never invented.

Discussion (0)

Sign in to join the discussion.

Loading comments…