Article ID Journal Published Year Pages File Type
797267 Journal of the Mechanics and Physics of Solids 2015 21 Pages PDF
Abstract

•A new phase-field model with transparent prescription of nucleation and kinetics.•Complex kinetics and nucleation can be easily incorporated.•1D and 2D examples characterize the model.•Kinetics examples include stick–slip and anisotropic behavior.•Nucleation examples show rate-dependence, complex dependence on principal and shear stresses

The motion of microstructural interfaces is important in modeling twinning and structural phase transformations. Continuum models fall into two classes: sharp-interface models, where interfaces are singular surfaces; and regularized-interface models, such as phase-field models, where interfaces are smeared out. The former are challenging for numerical solutions because the interfaces need to be explicitly tracked, but have the advantage that the kinetics of existing interfaces and the nucleation of new interfaces can be transparently and precisely prescribed. In contrast, phase-field models do not require explicit tracking of interfaces, thereby enabling relatively simple numerical calculations, but the specification of kinetics and nucleation is both restrictive and extremely opaque. This prevents straightforward calibration of phase-field models to experiment and/or molecular simulations, and breaks the multiscale hierarchy of passing information from atomic to continuum. Consequently, phase-field models cannot be confidently used in dynamic settings.This shortcoming of existing phase-field models motivates our work. We present the formulation of a phase-field model – i.e., a model with regularized interfaces that do not require explicit numerical tracking – that allows for easy and transparent prescription of complex interface kinetics and nucleation. The key ingredients are a re-parametrization of the energy density to clearly separate nucleation from kinetics; and an evolution law that comes from a conservation statement for interfaces. This enables clear prescription of nucleation – through the source term of the conservation law – and kinetics – through a distinct interfacial velocity field. A formal limit of the kinetic driving force recovers the classical continuum sharp-interface driving force, providing confidence in both the re-parametrized energy and the evolution statement. We present some 1D calculations characterizing the formulation; in a companion paper, we present more extensive 2D calculations.

Related Topics
Physical Sciences and Engineering Engineering Mechanical Engineering
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