https://doi.org/10.1140/epjb/e2003-00037-3
Phasons and the plastic deformation of quasicrystals
Laboratoire de Minéralogie-Cristallographie (UMR CNRS 7590) ,
Universités de Paris-VI and de Paris-VII, Case 115, 4 place Jussieu,
75252 Paris Cedex 05, France
Corresponding author: a maurice.kleman@mines.org
Received:
6
November
2002
Published online:
14
February
2003
The plastic deformation of quasicrystals (QC) is ruled by two types of singularities of
the QC order, singularities of the `phonon' strain field, and singularities of the `phason'
strain field. In the framework of the general topological theory of defects, in which the QC is
defined as an irrational subset of a crystal of higher dimension, both types of defects appear
as distinct components of the same entity, called a disvection [2]. Each of them can also be
given a description in terms of more classical concepts, within a detailed analysis of the
Volterra process: it can be shown that (a) the phonon singularity breaks some symmetry of
translation, represented by its Burgers vector projected from a high dimensional
crystalline lattice onto the physical space; it is therefore akin to a perfect dislocation; (b) the
phason singularities (there are many attached to each
-dislocation), that
we call matching faults,
are dipoles of dislocations whose Burgers vectors are of a special type; they do break not
only a particular symmetry of translation but also the class of local isomorphism (in the jargon of QCs) of the QC. In fact, such dipoles, if they open up into loops, bound stacking faults –
thus a phason singularity is an imperfect dislocation. A mismatch is nothing else than an
elementary matching fault.
It is suggested that it is the simultaneous presence of perfect dislocations and of
phason singularities, and their interplay, that are at the origin of the peculiar characters of
the plastic deformation of quasicrystals, namely the brittle-ductile transition followed by a
stage of work softening; in particular the brittle-ductile transition could be related to a
cooperative transition of the Kosterlitz-Thouless type which affects the dipoles and turn
them into (imperfect) dislocation loops.
PACS: 61.44.Br – Quasicrystals / 61.72.Bb – Theories and models of crystal defects / 61.72.Nn – Stacking faults and other planar or extended defects
© EDP Sciences, Società Italiana di Fisica, Springer-Verlag, 2003