🔧На сайте запланированы технические работы
25.12.2025 в промежутке с 18:00 до 21:00 по Московскому времени (GMT+3) на сайте будут проводиться плановые технические работы. Возможны перебои с доступом к сайту. Приносим извинения за временные неудобства. Благодарим за понимание!
🔧Site maintenance is scheduled.
Scheduled maintenance will be performed on the site from 6:00 PM to 9:00 PM Moscow time (GMT+3) on December 25, 2025. Site access may be interrupted. We apologize for the inconvenience. Thank you for your understanding!

 

Plastic distortion as a fundamental mechanism in nonlinear mesomechanics of plastic deformation and fracture


Cite item

Full Text

Open Access Open Access
Restricted Access Access granted
Restricted Access Subscription Access

Abstract

Any deformed solid represents two self-consistent functional subsystems: a 3D crystal subsystem and a 2D planar subsystem (surface layers and all internal interfaces). In the planar subsystem, which lacks thermodynamic equilibrium and translation invariance, a primary plastic flow develops as nonlinear waves of structural transformations. At the nanoscale, such planar nonlinear transformations create lattice curvature in the 3D subsystem, resulting in bifurcational interstitial states there. The bifurcational states give rise to a fundamentally new mechanism of plastic deformation and fracture—plastic distortion—which is allowed for neither in continuum mechanics nor in fracture mechanics. The paper substantiates that plastic distortion plays a leading role in dislocation generation and glide, plasticity and superplasticity, plastic strain localization and fracture.

About the authors

V. E. Panin

Institute of Strength Physics and Materials Science, Siberian Branch; National Research Tomsk Polytechnic University; National Research Tomsk State University

Author for correspondence.
Email: paninve@ispms.tsc.ru
Russian Federation, Tomsk, 634055; Tomsk, 634050; Tomsk, 634050

V. E. Egorushkin

Institute of Strength Physics and Materials Science, Siberian Branch; National Research Tomsk State University

Email: paninve@ispms.tsc.ru
Russian Federation, Tomsk, 634055; Tomsk, 634050

A. V. Panin

Institute of Strength Physics and Materials Science, Siberian Branch

Email: paninve@ispms.tsc.ru
Russian Federation, Tomsk, 634055

A. G. Chernyavskii

S.P. Korolev Rocket and Space Corporation “Energia”

Email: paninve@ispms.tsc.ru
Russian Federation, Korolev, Moscow area, 141070

Supplementary files

Supplementary Files
Action
1. JATS XML

Copyright (c) 2016 Pleiades Publishing, Ltd.