Screw dislocation dipole in non-linear continuum

1972 ◽  
Vol 22 (3) ◽  
pp. 189-203 ◽  
Author(s):  
Z. Knésl ◽  
F. Kroupa
Author(s):  
E. L. Thomas ◽  
S. L. Sass

In polyethylene single crystals pairs of black and white lines spaced 700-3,000Å apart, parallel to the [100] and [010] directions, have been identified as microsector boundaries. A microsector is formed when the plane of chain folding changes over a small distance within a polymer crystal. In order for the different types of folds to accommodate at the boundary between the 2 fold domains, a staggering along the chain direction and a rotation of the chains in the plane of the boundary occurs. The black-white contrast from a microsector boundary can be explained in terms of these chain rotations. We demonstrate that microsectors can terminate within the crystal and interpret the observed terminal strain contrast in terms of a screw dislocation dipole model.


Author(s):  
Xu Wang ◽  
Peter Schiavone

Using conformal mapping techniques, we design novel lamellar structures which cloak the influence of any one of a screw dislocation dipole, a circular Eshelby inclusion or a concentrated couple. The lamellar structure is composed of two half-planes bonded through a middle coating with a variable thickness within which is located either the dislocation dipole, the circular Eshelby inclusion or the concentrated couple. The Eshelby inclusion undergoes either uniform anti-plane eigenstrains or uniform in-plane volumetric eigenstrains. As a result, the influence of any one of the dislocation dipole, the circular Eshelby inclusion or the concentrated couple is cloaked in that their presence will not disturb the prescribed uniform stress fields in both surrounding half-planes.


1998 ◽  
Vol 538 ◽  
Author(s):  
Torben Rasmussen

AbstractAtomistic simulations are used to study cross slip of a single screw dislocation as well as screw dislocation dipole annihilation in Cu. A configuration space path techniquex is applied to determine, without presumptions about the saddle point, the minimum energy path of transition for cross slip. The cross slip process is that proposed by Friedel and Escaig, and the energy of the in-plane constriction initiating cross slip is determined. A minimum stable dipole height much smaller than previously inferred from experimental studies is found. Relaxed screw dislocation dipoles adopt a skew configuration due to the anisotropy of Cu. The path technique is applied to investigate annihilation of stable screw dislocation dipoles, and the energy barrier for annihilation as a function of dipole height is determined for both homogeneous and heterogeneous cross slip leading to the annihilation. The results might be used as quantitative input into meso-/macro-scopical modelling approaches which rely on parameters deduced from either simulation or experiment.


1988 ◽  
Vol 63 (3) ◽  
pp. 726-731 ◽  
Author(s):  
K. M. Lin ◽  
C. T. Hu ◽  
Sanboh Lee

1967 ◽  
Vol 28 ◽  
pp. 105-176
Author(s):  
Robert F. Christy

(Ed. note: The custom in these Symposia has been to have a summary-introductory presentation which lasts about 1 to 1.5 hours, during which discussion from the floor is minor and usually directed at technical clarification. The remainder of the session is then devoted to discussion of the whole subject, oriented around the summary-introduction. The preceding session, I-A, at Nice, followed this pattern. Christy suggested that we might experiment in his presentation with a much more informal approach, allowing considerable discussion of the points raised in the summary-introduction during its presentation, with perhaps the entire morning spent in this way, reserving the afternoon session for discussion only. At Varenna, in the Fourth Symposium, several of the summaryintroductory papers presented from the astronomical viewpoint had been so full of concepts unfamiliar to a number of the aerodynamicists-physicists present, that a major part of the following discussion session had been devoted to simply clarifying concepts and then repeating a considerable amount of what had been summarized. So, always looking for alternatives which help to increase the understanding between the different disciplines by introducing clarification of concept as expeditiously as possible, we tried Christy's suggestion. Thus you will find the pattern of the following different from that in session I-A. I am much indebted to Christy for extensive collaboration in editing the resulting combined presentation and discussion. As always, however, I have taken upon myself the responsibility for the final editing, and so all shortcomings are on my head.)


Author(s):  
N. Y. Jin

Localised plastic deformation in Persistent Slip Bands(PSBs) is a characteristic feature of fatigue in many materials. The dislocation structure in the PSBs contains regularly spaced dislocation dipole walls occupying a volume fraction of around 10%. The remainder of the specimen, the inactive "matrix", contains dislocation veins at a volume fraction of 50% or more. Walls and veins are both separated by regions in which the dislocation density is lower by some orders of magnitude. Since the PSBs offer favorable sites for the initiation of fatigue cracks, the formation of the PSB wall structure is of great interest. Winter has proposed that PSBs form as the result of a transformation of the matrix structure to a regular wall structure, and that the instability occurs among the broad dipoles near the center of a vein rather than in the hard shell surounding the vein as argued by Kulmann-Wilsdorf.


Sign in / Sign up

Export Citation Format

Share Document