Skip to main content

Lund University Publications

LUND UNIVERSITY LIBRARIES

Multi-scale plasticity modeling : Coupled discrete dislocation and continuum crystal plasticity

Curtin, W. A. ; Wallin, M. LU ; Ristinmaa, M. LU orcid and Needleman, A. (2008) Advances in Heterogeneous Material Mechanics 2008 - 2nd International Conference on Heterogeneous Material Mechanics, ICHMM 2008 p.320-320
Abstract

A hierarchical multiscale model that couples a region of material described by discrete dislocation plasticity1 to a surrounding region described by conventional crystal plasticity is presented. The coupled model captures size-dependent plasticity phenomena, such as dislocation structuring and formation of geometrically necessary dislocations, that can occur at the micron scale while also capturing the plastic flow, and associated energy dissipation, at much larger scales where size-dependent effects are minimal. The key to the model is the treatment of the interface between the discrete and continuum regions, where continuity of tractions and displacements is maintained in an average sense and the flow of burgers vector via "passing"... (More)

A hierarchical multiscale model that couples a region of material described by discrete dislocation plasticity1 to a surrounding region described by conventional crystal plasticity is presented. The coupled model captures size-dependent plasticity phenomena, such as dislocation structuring and formation of geometrically necessary dislocations, that can occur at the micron scale while also capturing the plastic flow, and associated energy dissipation, at much larger scales where size-dependent effects are minimal. The key to the model is the treatment of the interface between the discrete and continuum regions, where continuity of tractions and displacements is maintained in an average sense and the flow of burgers vector via "passing" of discrete dislocations is managed. The model is validated through uniaxial plane-strain tension tests which show that the coupled model deforms similarly to both single-scale models. The multiscale model is then applied to study crack growth, where both near-tip dislocation structures and far-field plastic dissipation are crucial to the overall toughening. Results show that the toughening is nearly independent of the size of the discrete dislocation plasticity region around the crack tip down to 5um, simultaneously validating the model and identifying the lengths scales over which size dependence plays a role in this problem. The multiscale model reduces the computational burden of discrete dislocation plasticity modeling substantially with little or no loss of fidelity in the predictions of material behavior, thereby greatly extending the range of discrete dislocation modeling. Future work will combine this method with the Coupled Atomistic/Discrete-Dislocation2 model developed by one of the co-authors, leading to a true atom-to-continuum multiscale model for metallic materials.

(Less)
Please use this url to cite or link to this publication:
author
; ; and
organization
publishing date
type
Chapter in Book/Report/Conference proceeding
publication status
published
subject
host publication
Advances in Heterogeneous Material Mechanics 2008 - 2nd International Conference on Heterogeneous Material Mechanics, ICHMM 2008
pages
1 pages
publisher
DEStech Publications
conference name
Advances in Heterogeneous Material Mechanics 2008 - 2nd International Conference on Heterogeneous Material Mechanics, ICHMM 2008
conference location
Huangshan, China
conference dates
2008-06-03 - 2008-06-08
external identifiers
  • scopus:56649083618
ISBN
9781932078800
language
English
LU publication?
yes
id
58c4cf59-2b18-4dc8-8585-94475aa934d8
date added to LUP
2024-03-07 08:37:53
date last changed
2024-03-22 10:13:35
@inproceedings{58c4cf59-2b18-4dc8-8585-94475aa934d8,
  abstract     = {{<p>A hierarchical multiscale model that couples a region of material described by discrete dislocation plasticity1 to a surrounding region described by conventional crystal plasticity is presented. The coupled model captures size-dependent plasticity phenomena, such as dislocation structuring and formation of geometrically necessary dislocations, that can occur at the micron scale while also capturing the plastic flow, and associated energy dissipation, at much larger scales where size-dependent effects are minimal. The key to the model is the treatment of the interface between the discrete and continuum regions, where continuity of tractions and displacements is maintained in an average sense and the flow of burgers vector via "passing" of discrete dislocations is managed. The model is validated through uniaxial plane-strain tension tests which show that the coupled model deforms similarly to both single-scale models. The multiscale model is then applied to study crack growth, where both near-tip dislocation structures and far-field plastic dissipation are crucial to the overall toughening. Results show that the toughening is nearly independent of the size of the discrete dislocation plasticity region around the crack tip down to 5um, simultaneously validating the model and identifying the lengths scales over which size dependence plays a role in this problem. The multiscale model reduces the computational burden of discrete dislocation plasticity modeling substantially with little or no loss of fidelity in the predictions of material behavior, thereby greatly extending the range of discrete dislocation modeling. Future work will combine this method with the Coupled Atomistic/Discrete-Dislocation2 model developed by one of the co-authors, leading to a true atom-to-continuum multiscale model for metallic materials.</p>}},
  author       = {{Curtin, W. A. and Wallin, M. and Ristinmaa, M. and Needleman, A.}},
  booktitle    = {{Advances in Heterogeneous Material Mechanics 2008 - 2nd International Conference on Heterogeneous Material Mechanics, ICHMM 2008}},
  isbn         = {{9781932078800}},
  language     = {{eng}},
  pages        = {{320--320}},
  publisher    = {{DEStech Publications}},
  title        = {{Multi-scale plasticity modeling : Coupled discrete dislocation and continuum crystal plasticity}},
  year         = {{2008}},
}