Article ID Journal Published Year Pages File Type
792994 Journal of the Mechanics and Physics of Solids 2015 20 Pages PDF
Abstract

The mechanical response of polycrystalline metals is significantly affected by the behaviour of grain boundaries, in particular when these interfaces constitute a relatively large fraction of the material volume. One of the current challenges in the modelling of grain boundaries at a continuum (polycrystalline) scale is the incorporation of the many different interaction mechanisms between dislocations and grain boundaries, as identified from fine-scale experiments and simulations. In this paper, the objective is to develop a model that accounts for the redistribution of the defects along the grain boundary in the context of gradient crystal plasticity. The proposed model incorporates the nonlocal relaxation of the grain boundary net defect density. A numerical study on a bicrystal specimen in simple shear is carried out, showing that the spreading of the defect content has a clear influence on the macroscopic response, as well as on the microscopic fields. This work provides a basis that enables a more thorough analysis of the plasticity of polycrystalline metals at the continuum level, where the plasticity at grain boundaries matters.

Related Topics
Physical Sciences and Engineering Engineering Mechanical Engineering
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