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Diffusion of elastic waves in a continuum solid with a random array of pinned dislocations

The propagation of incoherent elastic energy in a three-dimensional solid due to the scattering by many, randomly placed and oriented, pinned dislocation segments, is considered in a continuum mechanics framework. The scattering mechanism is that of an elastic string of length L that re-radiates as a response to an incoming wave. The scatterers are thus not static but have their own dynamics. A Bethe-Salpeter (BS) equation is established, and a Ward-Takahashi Identity (WTI) is demonstrated. The BS equation is written as a spectral problem that, using the WTI, is solved in the diffusive limit. To leading order a diffusion behavior indeed results, and an explicit formula for the diffusion coeffcient is obtained. It can be evaluated in an Independent Scattering Approximation (ISA) in the absence of intrinsic damping. It depends not only on the bare longitudinal and transverse wave velocities but also on the renormalized velocities, as well as attenuation coeffcients, of the coherent waves. The influence of the length scale given by L, and of the resonant behavior for frequencies near the resonance frequency of the strings, can be explicitly identified. A Kubo representation for the diffusion constant can be identified. Previous generic results, obtained with an energy transfer formalism, are recovered when the number of dislocations per unit volume is small. This includes the equipartition of diffusive energy density which, however, does not hold in general. The formalism bears a number of similarities with the behavior of electromagnetic waves in a medium with a random distribution of dielectric scatterers; the elastic interaction, however, is momentum dependent.

preprint2022arXivOpen access
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