Developing Mode I Cohesive Traction Laws for Crystalline UHMWPE Interphases Using Molecular Dynamics Simulations

Our latest paper, “Developing Mode I Cohesive Traction Laws for Crystalline UHMWPE Interphases Using Molecular Dynamics Simulations,” is now freely accessible for the next 50 days from this link: https://authors.elsevier.com/a/1k9Pk3In-v14Go

Our MD-based approach predicts the interphase thickness and applies boundary conditions across this thickness to determine the stress-displacement response, factoring in atomic interactions that reflect the full spectrum of material behavior: initial elasticity, energy absorption, crack propagation, and unique unloading governed by van der Waals forces. This MD-derived traction law can be used as a material property in multiscale models, bridging atomic to continuum scales, and is instrumental in simulating failure mechanisms, such as defibrillation, within the continuum domain. However, to scale-up, incorporating larger defects like voids between fibrils is essential—a key direction in our ongoing research. Expanding this work, we are developing traction laws for Mode II and mixed-mode loading.

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