Papers by Keyword: Dislocation Dynamics Simulation

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Abstract: The mechanical behavior of the polycrystalline NR3 Ni-based superalloy has been investigated at the microscopic scale. The elementary deformation mechanisms have been analyzed using transmission electron microscope observations as well as in situ straining experiments. Under low stress and relatively low strain rate conditions, a large variety of shearing micromechanisms has been observed depending on the local microstructure and the local effective stress. The influence of the smallest precipitates on the creep behavior has been enlightened: they induce narrow channels which act as obstacle for the movement of the dislocations. In the case of the narrowest channel, the deformation can operate by the propagation of Shockley dislocations or else, by the only propagation of the leading partial resulting from the partial dislocation decorrelation. The occurrence of the observed micromechanisms has been quantitatively analyzed using a nodal dislocation dynamics simulation.
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Abstract: This article reports on a study of the microstructure and mechanical response of copper polycrystals with grain sizes in the micrometer range. Three-dimensional dislocation dynamics simulations are used for the first time to investigate grain boundary strengthening and the Hall-Petch law. The methodology, which involves constructing a microcrystalline representative volume element with periodic boundary conditions, is briefly presented. Simulation results show that the initial density of dislocation sources and the cross-slip mechanism are two key factors controlling the heterogeneity of plastic deformation within the grains. At yield, the smaller the grains size, the more plastic deformation is heterogeneously distributed between grains and homogeneously distributed inside the grains. A size effect is reproduced and it is shown that the Hall-Petch exponent decreases from the very beginning of plastic flow and may reach a stable value at strains larger than the conventional proof stress.
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Abstract: Macroscopic mechanical response of metal polycrystal with mean grain diameter of 0.2 to 5 microns are simulated by a strain gradient crystal plasticity software code which incorporates some phenomenological models for dislocation accumulation and annihilation, as well as dislocation-grain boundary interactions. Obtained results of macroscopic stress-strain relation show significant increase of yield stress and strain hardening ratio for fine grained specimens.
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