141 research outputs found
The Peierls--Nabarro FE model in two-phase microstructures -- a comparison with atomistics
This paper evaluates qualitatively as well as quantitatively the accuracy of
a recently proposed Peierls--Nabarro Finite Element (PN-FE) model for
dislocations by a direct comparison with an equivalent molecular statics
simulation. To this end, a two-dimensional microstructural specimen subjected
to simple shear is considered, consisting of a central soft phase flanked by
two hard-phase regions. A hexagonal atomic structure with equal lattice spacing
is adopted, the interactions of which are described by the Lennard--Jones
potential with phase specific depths of its energy well. During loading, edge
dislocation dipoles centred in the soft phase are introduced, which progress
towards the phase boundaries, where they pile up. Under a sufficiently high
external shear load, the leading dislocation is eventually transmitted into the
harder phase. The homogenized PN-FE model is calibrated to an atomistic model
in terms of effective elasticity constants and glide plane properties as
obtained from simple uniform deformations. To study the influence of different
formulations of the glide plane potential, multiple approaches are employed,
ranging from a simple sinusoidal function of the tangential disregistry to a
complex model that couples the influence of the tangential and the normal
disregistries. The obtained results show that, qualitatively, the dislocation
structure, displacement, strain fields, and the dislocation evolution are
captured adequately. The simplifications of the PN-FE model lead, however, to
some discrepancies within the dislocation core. Such discrepancies play a
dominant role in the dislocation transmission process, which thus cannot
quantitatively be captured properly. Despite its simplicity, the PN-FE model
proves to be an elegant tool for a qualitative study of edge dislocation
behaviour in two-phase microstructures, although it may not be quantitatively
predictive.Comment: 29 pages, 11 figures, 5 tables, abstract shortened to fulfill 1920
character limit, small changes after revie
Microstructural topology effects on the onset of ductile failure in multi-phase materials - a systematic computational approach
Multi-phase materials are key for modern engineering applications. They are
generally characterized by a high strength and ductility. Many of these
materials fail by ductile fracture of the, generally softer, matrix phase. In
this work we systematically study the influence of the arrangement of the
phases by correlating the microstructure of a two-phase material to the onset
of ductile failure. A single topological feature is identified in which
critical levels of damage are consistently indicated. It consists of a small
region of the matrix phase with particles of the hard phase on both sides in a
direction that depends on the applied deformation. Due to this configuration, a
large tensile hydrostatic stress and plastic strain is observed inside the
matrix, indicating high damage. This topological feature has, to some extent,
been recognized before for certain multi-phase materials. This study however
provides insight in the mechanics involved, including the influence of the
loading conditions and the arrangement of the phases in the material
surrounding the feature. Furthermore, a parameter study is performed to explore
the influence of volume fraction and hardness of the inclusion phase. For the
same macroscopic hardening response, the ductility is predicted to increase if
the volume fraction of the hard phase increases while at the same time its
hardness decreases
On Micromechanical Parameter Identification With Integrated DIC and the Role of Accuracy in Kinematic Boundary Conditions
Integrated Digital Image Correlation (IDIC) is nowadays a well established
full-field experimental procedure for reliable and accurate identification of
material parameters. It is based on the correlation of a series of images
captured during a mechanical experiment, that are matched by displacement
fields derived from an underlying mechanical model. In recent studies, it has
been shown that when the applied boundary conditions lie outside the employed
field of view, IDIC suffers from inaccuracies. A typical example is a
micromechanical parameter identification inside a Microstructural Volume
Element (MVE), whereby images are usually obtained by electron microscopy or
other microscopy techniques but the loads are applied at a much larger scale.
For any IDIC model, MVE boundary conditions still need to be specified, and any
deviation or fluctuation in these boundary conditions may significantly
influence the quality of identification. Prescribing proper boundary conditions
is generally a challenging task, because the MVE has no free boundary, and the
boundary displacements are typically highly heterogeneous due to the underlying
microstructure. The aim of this paper is therefore first to quantify the
effects of errors in the prescribed boundary conditions on the accuracy of the
identification in a systematic way. To this end, three kinds of mechanical
tests, each for various levels of material contrast ratios and levels of image
noise, are carried out by means of virtual experiments. For simplicity, an
elastic compressible Neo-Hookean constitutive model under plane strain
assumption is adopted. It is shown that a high level of detail is required in
the applied boundary conditions. This motivates an improved boundary condition
application approach, which considers constitutive material parameters as well
as kinematic variables at the boundary of the entire MVE as degrees of freedom
in...Comment: 37 pages, 25 figures, 2 tables, 2 algorithm
Fracture initiation in multi-phase materials: a systematic three-dimensional approach using a FFT-based solver
This paper studies a two-phase material with a microstructure composed of a
hard brittle reinforcement phase embedded in a soft ductile matrix. It
addresses the full three-dimensional nature of the microstructure and
macroscopic deformation. A large ensemble of periodic microstructures is used,
whereby the individual grains of the two phases are modeled using equi-sized
cubes. A particular solution strategy relying on the Fast Fourier Transform is
adopted, which has a high computational efficiency both in terms of speed and
memory footprint, thus enabling a statistically meaningful analysis. This
solution method naturally accompanies the regular microstructural model, as the
Fast Fourier Transform relies on a regular grid.
Using the many considered microstructures as an ensemble, the average
arrangement of phases around fracture initiation sites is objectively
identified by the correlation between microstructure and fracture initiation --
in three dimensions. The results show that fracture initiates where regions of
the hard phase are interrupted by bands of the soft phase that are aligned with
the direction of maximum shear. In such regions, the hard phase is arranged
such that the area of the phase boundary perpendicular to the principal strain
direction is maximum, leading to high hydrostatic tensile stresses, while not
interrupting the shear bands that form in the soft phase. The local
incompatibility that is present around the shear bands is responsible for a
high plastic strain. By comparing the response to a two-dimensional
microstructure it is observed that the response is qualitatively similar (both
macroscopically and microscopically). One important difference is that the
local strain partitioning between the two phases is over-predicted by the
two-dimensional microstructure, leading to an overestimation of damage
Dynamic instabilities of fracture under biaxial strain using a phase field model
We present a phase field model of the propagation of fracture under plane
strain. This model, based on simple physical considerations, is able to
accurately reproduce the different behavior of cracks (the principle of local
symmetry, the Griffith and Irwin criteria, and mode-I branching). In addition,
we test our model against recent experimental findings showing the presence of
oscillating cracks under bi-axial load. Our model again reproduces well
observed supercritical Hopf bifurcation, and is therefore the first simulation
which does so
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