posted on 2021-07-08, 09:04authored byPriya Subramanian, Andrew ArcherAndrew Archer, Edgar Knobloch, Alastair M Rucklidge
Non-topological defects in spatial patterns such as grain boundaries in crystalline materials arise from local variations of the pattern properties such as amplitude, wavelength and orientation. Such non-topological defects may be treated as spatially localized structures, i.e. as fronts connecting distinct periodic states. Using the two-dimensional quadratic-cubic Swift–Hohenberg equation, we obtain fully nonlinear equilibria containing grain boundaries that separate a patch of hexagons with one orientation (the grain) from an identical hexagonal state with a different orientation (the background). These grain boundaries take the form of closed curves with multiple penta-hepta defects that arise from local orientation mismatches between the two competing hexagonal structures. Multiple isolas occurring robustly over a wide range of parameters are obtained even in the absence of a unique Maxwell point, underlining the importance of retaining pinning when analysing patterns with defects, an effect omitted from the commonly used amplitude-phase description. Similar results are obtained for quasiperiodic structures in a two-scale phase-field model.
Funding
Hooke Research Fellowship
National Science Foundation (DMS-1908891)
Engineering and Physical Sciences Council (EP/P015689/1)
Engineering and Physical Sciences Council (EP/P015611/1)
This is a pre-copyedited, author-produced PDF of an article accepted for publication in IMA Journal of Applied Mathematics following peer review. The version of record Priya Subramanian, Andrew J Archer, Edgar Knobloch, Alastair M Rucklidge, Snaking without subcriticality: grain boundaries as non-topological defects, IMA Journal of Applied Mathematics, Volume 86, Issue 5, October 2021, Pages 1164–1180, https://doi.org/10.1093/imamat/hxab032 is available online at: https://doi.org/10.1093/imamat/hxab032.