Size effects under homogeneous deformation of single crystals: A discrete dislocation analysis Academic Article uri icon

abstract

  • Mechanism-based discrete dislocation plasticity is used to investigate the effect of size on micron scale crystal plasticity under conditions of macroscopically homogeneous deformation. Long-range interactions among dislocations are naturally incorporated through elasticity. Constitutive rules are used which account for key short-range dislocation interactions. These include junction formation and dynamic source and obstacle creation. Two-dimensional calculations are carried out which can handle high dislocation densities and large strains up to 0.1. The focus is laid on the effect of dimensional constraints on plastic flow and hardening processes. Specimen dimensions ranging from hundreds of nanometers to tens of microns are considered. Our findings show a strong size-dependence of flow strength and work-hardening rate at the micron scale. Taylor-like hardening is shown to be insufficient as a rationale for the flow stress scaling with specimen dimensions. The predicted size effect is associated with the emergence, at sufficient resolution, of a signed dislocation density. Heuristic correlations between macroscopic flow stress and macroscopic measures of dislocation density are sought. Most accurate among those is a correlation based on two state variables: the total dislocation density and an effective, scale-dependent measure of signed density. 2007 Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved.

published proceedings

  • JOURNAL OF THE MECHANICS AND PHYSICS OF SOLIDS

author list (cited authors)

  • Guruprasad, P. J., & Benzerga, A. A.

citation count

  • 83

complete list of authors

  • Guruprasad, PJ||Benzerga, AA

publication date

  • January 2008