SAN JOSE, Calif., April 30, 2002 -- A team of IBM and Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory (LLNL) scientists have demonstrated a major advance in simulating the strength of materials using computers.
Using one of the world's most powerful supercomputers as a computational microscope, the scientists can peer deep inside simulated materials to reveal how they break, as well as what makes them strong or weak, stiff or flexible. Calculating the strength of new materials is a critical issue in creating structures as small as microprocessors -- or as large as buildings or airplanes -- that will withstand the forces they face in the real world.
The scientists' results are also a major step toward using supercomputers to design new materials with customized properties, such as strength, hardness and toughness.
"The sudden unexpected fracture of a material can have devastating consequences, such as during an earthquake or the failure of an airplane structure," said Farid F. Abraham, the researcher from IBM's Almaden Research Center in San Jose, Calif., who led the team effort. "Today's supercomputers and our innovative software allow us to understand their properties much better and how they deform and break."
In the most extensive computer calculations of their type to date, the scientists used the ACSI White supercomputer, which was built last year by IBM for LLNL, to create and then deform simulated cubes of as many as 1 billion atoms. Creative computer visualization techniques revealed the inner workings of the atoms' response to the stress: stunning images and videos showing cracks moving at surprising supersonic speeds as well as the expanding tangle of defects deep inside the cube that can harden a tough, flexible material to the point of brittle fracture.
"Handling the data was a research project in itself," said Tomas Diaz de la Rubia, LLNL physicist. "Visualizing and navigating within huge datasets such as these is a milestone of the Accelerated Strategic Computing Initiative (ASCI) project that we have now achieved."
Details and results of the computer simulation experiments are published in two technical papers and the cover illustration of Tuesday's (April 30) online edition of the prestigious Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences. (Stunning videos and stills of the computer simulation can be seen at: http://www.research.ibm.com/resources/news/20020429_fracture_simulation.shtml In each of the simulations, which required up to 10 days of around-the-clock computations, the supercomputer calculated the forces between each of the atoms and its neighbors and their positions as the edges of a notched cube or atoms were pulled apart. In the brittle fracture simulation, a crack formed at the notch and traveled rapidly through the material as stress concentrated at the crack tip and ripped apart the chemical bonds that held nearby atoms together. The IBM/LLNL scientists found that when the material is given the property of becoming stiffer, not weaker, as it is stressed --as occurs with certain polymers and rubbers -- the crack tip can shoot through the material at supersonic speeds (that is, faster than the speed of sound in that material). Such behavior was long thought to be impossible. But in recent years, supersonic crack speeds have been observed directly, or suspected, in both laboratory experiments and two devastating 1999 earthquakes in Turkey. The IBM/LLNL simulation gives a sound theoretical footing to such claims and will result in improved tools to understand and predict the behaviors of earthquakes and to design new materials that can resist brittle fracture.
In the work hardening computation, the simulated material was made to be tough, not brittle. That meant that the atoms would initially respond to stress by sliding past each other rather than simply breaking apart. The offset atoms create lines of misalignment in the periodic structure of the material that are called dislocations. In a soft metal under stress, such dislocations simply pass through the material as deformation occurs. But in a stronger or more complex material, various dislocations collide, which halts further atomic motion at each intersection. As deformation continues, these pinned dislocations accumulate, initially increasing the strength of the material because it can resist a greater force. But if the stress continues, the density of pinned dislocations can become so great that the material turns brittle and breaks.
In addition to Abraham and Diaz de la Rubia, co-authors were Robert Walkup of IBM's T.J. Watson Research Center, Yorktown Height, N.Y.; New Yor; Huajian Gao, a visiting scientist at IBM-Almaden now at the Max Planck Institute for Metals Research in Stuttgart, Germany; and Mark Duchaineau and Mark Seager of LLNL.
Over the past three decades, Abraham has been a pioneer in using the
most powerful computers available to calculate and predict materials
properties. In 1985, he was able to model 200,000 atoms -- a flat
square having only 450 atoms on a side. In July 1994, he published a
million-atom simulation, including the first-ever World Wide Web video
linked from a scientific paper. ("Instability Dynamics of Fracture: A
Computer Simulation" by F. F. Abraham, D. Brodbeck, R. A. Rafey and W.
E. Rudge, Physical Review Letters, Vol. 73, No. 2, 11 July 1994, pp.
272-275.)
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