Machine Learning to Analyze the Atomic Energy Landscape in Poly-Crystalline Materials

ORAL

Abstract

Plastic deformation of poly-crystalline materials occurs at defects such as grain boundaries. At a small scale, the plasticity typically consists of atoms at the defect core shifting between metastable positions (rearranging). Predicting these rearrangements at grain boundaries is challenging due to the structural complexity. We adapt a machine learning technique used successfully on disordered glassy materials to study atomic plasticity in crystalline metals. We first catalog the atomic rearrangements that occur, in large MD simulations of poly-crystalline aluminum and nickel at finite temperature. We train a support vector machine (SVM) to identify the local structure surrounding a particle just before it rearranges. The SVM classifies structures as susceptible to rearrangement with 90% accuracy in cross-validation. For each atom, we calculate a value derived from the SVM that is correlated with the susceptibility to rearrange, called softness, which provides a new view on atomic-scale plasticity in poly-crystals. We obtain a well-defined energy barrier for rearrangements for grain boundary particles and find that the average energy barrier is consistent with published experimental measurements.

Presenters

  • Tristan Sharp

    University of Pennsylvania

Authors

  • Tristan Sharp

    University of Pennsylvania

  • Spencer Thomas

    University of Pennsylvania

  • Ekin Cubuk

    Stanford University, Google Brain, Stanford Univ

  • Samuel Schoenholz

    Google Incorporated

  • David Srolovitz

    University of Pennsylvania

  • Andrea Liu

    University of Pennsylvania, Univ of Pennsylvania, Department of Physics and Astronomy, Department of Physics and Astronomy, Department of Physics and Astronomy, University of Pennsylvania