Abstract
In polycrystalline materials that fail by transgranular cleavage, it is known that crystallographic misorientation of preferred fracture planes across grain boundaries can provide crack growth resistance; despite this, the micromechanisms associated with crack transmission across grain boundaries and their role in determining the overall fracture resistance are not well understood. Recent studies on diverse structural materials such as steels, aluminum alloys and intermetallics have shown a correlation between fracture resistance and the twist component of grain misorientation. However, the lack of control over the degree and type of misorientation in experimental studies, combined with a dearth of analytical and computational investigations that fully account for the three-dimensional nature of the problem, have precluded a systematic analysis of this phenomenon. In this study, this phenomenon was investigated through in situ crack propagation experiments across grain boundaries of controlled twist misorientation in zinc bicrystals. Extrinsic toughening mechanisms that activate upon crack stagnation at the grain boundary deter further crack propagation. The mechanical response and crack growth behavior were observed to be dependent on the twist angle, and several accommodation mechanisms such as twinning, strain localization and slip band blocking contribute to fracture resistance by competing with crack propagation. Three-dimensional finite element analyses incorporating crystal plasticity were performed on a stagnant crack at the grain boundary that provide insight into crack-tip stress and strain fields in the second grain. These analyses qualitatively capture the overall trends in mechanical response as well as strain localization around stagnant crack-tips.
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