Situating the Vector Density Approach Among Contemporary Continuum Theories of Dislocation Dynamics

Author(s):  
Joseph Anderson ◽  
Vignesh Vivekanandan ◽  
Peng Lin ◽  
Kyle Starkey ◽  
Yash Pachaury ◽  
...  

Abstract For the past century, dislocations have been understood to be the carriers of plastic deformation in crystalline solids. However, their collective behavior is still poorly understood. Progress in understanding the collective behavior of dislocations has primarily come in one of two modes: the simulation of systems of interacting discrete dislocations and the treatment of density measures of varying complexity which are considered as continuum fields. A summary of contemporary models of continuum dislocation dynamics is presented. This includes, in order of complexity, the two-dimensional statistical theory of dislocations, the field dislocation mechanics treating the total Kroner-Nye tensor, vector density approaches which treat geometrically necessary dislocations on each slip system of a crystal, and high-order theories which examine the effect of dislocation curvature and distribution over orientation. Each of theories contain common themes, including statistical closure of the kinetic dislocation transport equations and treatment of dislocation reactions such as junction formation. An emphasis is placed on how these common themes rely on closure relations obtained by analysis of discrete dislocation dynamics experiments. The outlook of these various continuum theories of dislocation motion is then discussed.

2001 ◽  
Vol 673 ◽  
Author(s):  
B. von Blanckenhagen ◽  
P. Gumbsch ◽  
E. Arzt

ABSTRACTA discrete dislocation dynamics sim ulation is used to investigate dislocation motion in the confined geometry of a polycrystalline thin film. The repeated activ ation of a Frank-Read source is sim ulated. The stress to activate the sources and to initiate plastic fiow is significantly higher than predicted by models where the dislocations extend o ver the entire film thic kness. An efiective source size, which scales with the grain dimensions, yields fiow stresses in reasonable agreemen t with experimen ts. The infiuence of dislocations deposited at interfaces is investigated by comparing calculations for a film sandwic hed between a substrate and a capping layer with those for a free standing film.


2014 ◽  
Vol 1651 ◽  
Author(s):  
D. Weygand

ABSTRACTThe plasticity of micro-pillar deformation has widely been studied by discrete dislocation dynamics simulations to explain the so-called size effect. In this study the role of glissile junctions forming during plastic deformation under various loading scenarios is in the center of interest. The activity of these naturally forming dislocation sources is followed in detail. Surprisingly these junctions are rather active sources and not just another obstacle as often assumed. Their relative contribution to the overall dislocation density for the simulated specimens reaches often values of 20% or even more. The formation of such a glissile junction is often correlated to stress drops or the end of a stress drop. It is therefore suggested – at least for the sample sizes considered – that this dislocation multiplication mechanism should be take into account in continuum models such as crystal plasticity of higher order dislocation continuum theories.


Metals ◽  
2019 ◽  
Vol 9 (6) ◽  
pp. 637 ◽  
Author(s):  
Siwen Gao ◽  
Zerong Yang ◽  
Maximilian Grabowski ◽  
Jutta Rogal ◽  
Ralf Drautz ◽  
...  

A comprehensive 3D discrete dislocation dynamics model for Ni-base single crystal superalloys was used to investigate the influence of excess volumes induced by solute atoms Re and W on dislocation motion and creep under different tensile loads at 850 ° C. The solute atoms were distributed homogeneously only in γ matrix channels. Their excess volumes due to the size difference from the host Ni were calculated by density functional theory. The excess volume affected dislocation glide more strongly than dislocation climb. The relative positions of dislocations and solute atoms determined the magnitude of back stresses on the dislocation motion. Without diffusion of solute atoms, it was found that W with a larger excess volume had a stronger strengthening effect than Re. With increasing concentration of solute atoms, the creep resistance increased. However, a low external stress reduced the influence of different excess volumes and different concentrations on creep.


Sign in / Sign up

Export Citation Format

Share Document