Plastic size effect analysis of lamellar composites consisting of elastic and elastic–plastic layers was performed using a discrete dislocation plasticity approach, which was based upon applying periodic homogenization to the superposition method for discrete dislocation plasticity. In this approach, the decomposition of displacements into macro and perturbed components circumvents the calculation of superposing displacement fields induced by dislocations in an infinitely homogeneous medium, resulting in two periodic boundary value problems specialized for the analysis of representative volume elements. The present approach was verified by analyzing a model lamellar composite that includes edge dislocations fixed at interfaces. The plastic size effects due to dislocation pile-ups at interfaces were also analyzed. The analysis showed that, strain hardening in elastic–plastic layers arose depending upon two factors, namely the thickness and stiffness of elastic layers; and the gap between slip planes in adjacent elastic–plastic layers. In the case where the thickness of elastic layers was several dozen nm, strain hardening in elastic–plastic layers was restrained as the gap of the slip planes decreased. This particular effect was attributed to the long range stress due to pile-ups in adjacent elastic–plastic layers.

Plastic Size Effect Analysis of Lamellar Composites Using a Discrete Dislocation Plasticity Approach. D.Okumura, N.Ohno, K.Yamaguchi: International Journal of Plasticity, 2011, 27[12], 2040-55