Title: Tutorial I: Mechanics of Ductile Crystalline Solids
1Tutorial IMechanics of Ductile Crystalline
Solids
- Alberto M. Cuitiño
- Mechanical and Aerospace Engineering
- Rutgers University
- Piscataway, New Jersey
- cuitino_at_jove.rutgers.edu
IHPC-IMS Program on Advances Mathematical
Issues in Large Scale Simulation (Dec 2002 - Mar
2003 Oct - Nov 2003)
Institute of High Performance Computing
Institute for Mathematical Sciences, NUS
2Hierarchy of Scales
SCS test
ms
Grains
Single crystals
time
µs
Microstructures
ns
Force Field
nm
µm
mm
length
3The Role of Dislocations
ELASTICITY
Initial
PLASTICITY
area swept by dislocation
Dislocation Motion
Dislocation Generation
4Anatomy of a Dislocation Loop
Edge
Mixed
Screw
Mixed Segment
Edge Segment
b burgers vector
Glide Plane
Screw Segment
Area swept by dislocation loop
Animations from http//uet.edu.pk/dmems/
5Dislocation Motion and Arrest
6Tracking Dislocation in ONE Plane
(Ortiz, 1999)
7Overview
Effective Dislocation Energy
- Core Energy
- Dislocation Interaction
- Irreversible Obstacle Interaction
Equilibrium configurations
- Closed form solution at zero temperature.
- Metropolis Monte Carlo algorithm and mean field
approximation at finite temperatures.
Macroscopic Averages
8Effective Energy
Elastic interaction
Core energy
External field
where
with
m
Displacement jump across S
Slip Surface S
9Elastic interaction
- Displacement field
- Elastic distortion
- Elastic interaction
- Green function for an isotropic crystal
10Elastic Interaction
with
A1
R
A2
(Hirth and Lothe,1969)
11External Field
with
applied shear stress
forest dislocations
12Core Energy
d inter-planar distance
Ortiz and Phillips, 1999
13Phase-Field Energy
Minimization with respect to ? gives
core regularization factor
elastic energy
14Phase-Field Energy
Elastic energy
Core regularization
Core regularization factor
15Energy minimizing phase-field
Unconstrained minimization problem
if
with
16Irreversible Process and Kinetics
- Irreversible dislocation-obstacle interaction
may be built into a variational framework, we
introduce the incremental work function
incremental work dissipated at the obstacles
- Primary and forest dislocations react to form a
jog
- Updated phase-field follows from
17Irreversible Process and Kinetics
Kuhn-Tucker optimality conditions
Equilibrium condition
18Solution Procedure
and compute the reactions
- Stick predictor. Set
- Reaction projection
- Phase-field evaluation
19Closed-form solution
Calculations are gridless and scale with the
number of obstacles
Dislocation loops
20Macroscopic averages
21Forest Hardening
Parameters
BOUNDARY CONDITIONS Periodic OBSTACLE STRENGTH
Uniform, f 10 G b2 PEIERLS STRESS tp 0
22Monotonic loading
Evolution of dislocation density with strain.
Stress-strain curve.
23Dislocation Patterns
Evolution of dislocation pattern as a function of
slip strain
24Interaction with Obstacles
Detail of the evolution of the dislocation
pattern showing dislocations bypassing a pair of
obstacles
25Fading memory
a
b
d
c
Stress-strain curve.
e
f
Three dimensional view of the evolution of the
phase-field, showing the the switching of the
cusps.
26Cyclic loading
a
b
c
Stress-strain curve.
d
e
f
Evolution of dislocation density with strain.
i
g
h
27Irreversibility/Cyclic Loading
28Poisson ratio effects
Evolution of dislocation density with strain.
Stress-strain curve.
Stress-strain curve
Dislocation density vs.strain
b
29Obstacle density
30Multiple Glide
31Some Concluding Remarks
- The aim of this study is to develop a phase-field
theory of dislocation dynamics, strain hardening
and hysteresis in ductile single crystals. - This representation enables to identify
individual dislocation lines and arbitrary
dislocation geometries, including tracking
intricate topological transitions such as loop
nucleation, pinching and the formation of Orowan
loops. - This theory permits the coupling between slip
systems, consideration of obstacles of varying
strength, anisotropy, thermal and strain rate
effects.
Ortiz,1999
32Summary
- Phase-field model.
- Closed form solution at zero temperature.
- Temperature effects.
- Strain rate effects.
- Dislocation structures in grain boundaries.