Dislocation reactions, grain boundaries, and irreversibility in two-dimensional lattices using topological tweezers

Dislocations, disclinations, and grain boundaries are topological excitations of crystals that play a key role in determining outof-equilibrium material properties. In this article we study the kinetics, creation, and annihilation processes of these defects in a controllable way by applying "to...

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Veröffentlicht in:Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences - PNAS 2013-09, Vol.110 (39), p.15544-15548
Hauptverfasser: Irvine, William T. M., Hollingsworth, Andrew D., Grier, David G., Chaikin, Paul M.
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:Dislocations, disclinations, and grain boundaries are topological excitations of crystals that play a key role in determining outof-equilibrium material properties. In this article we study the kinetics, creation, and annihilation processes of these defects in a controllable way by applying "topological tweezers," an array of weak optical tweezers which strain the lattice by weakly pulling on a collection of particles without grabbing them individually. We use topological tweezers to deterministically control individual dislocations and grain boundaries, and reversibly create and destroy dislocation pairs in a 2D crystal of charged colloids. Starting from a perfect lattice, we exert a torque on a finite region and follow the complete step-by-step creation of a disoriented grain, from the creation of dislocation pairs through their reactions to form a grain boundary and their reduction of elastic energy. However, when the grain is rotated back to its original orientation the dislocation reactions do not retrace. Rather, the process is irreversible; the grain boundary expands instead of collapsing.
ISSN:0027-8424
1091-6490
DOI:10.1073/pnas.1300787110