Abstract

Nanocrystalline metals have been processed from powder predecessors in recent times in significant ways, and nowadays, materials are starting to be manufactured which are not only strong but also ductile. Nanocrystalline aluminum (Average grain size 51 nm) was synthesized through high-energy ball milling at the room temperature of microcrystalline powder. The particle size and crystallite sizes were obtained by Williamson Hall and found to be in good correlation with transmission spectroscopy (TEM) data. There was a significant increase in the mechanical properties of nanostructured aluminum in comparison to coarse-grained aluminum. Moreover, a phenomenological model of large-deformation, isotropic, rate-dependent plasticity is developed, which takes into account pressure dependency, plastic dilatation, and non-normal flow. The model has been incorporated into a finite element program. Compression and tension experiments were performed on nanocrystalline aluminum, and the constitutive parameters within the model were estimated from these experiments. The present study shows that the constitutive model successfully simulates the mechanical response of nanocrystalline aluminum with reasonable accuracy using our numerical finite-element capability.

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