Abstract

Abstract Three models of power-law creep are frequently presented. Those of Weertman assume distributed sources of dislocations which spread until they meet dislocations from other sources. They then annihilate by bulk diffusion. If the density of sources is independent of stress, a 9/2 power law follows, but the creep rate is grossly less than that observed. Moreover, the more plausible assumption of a source density proportional to the cube of the stress leads to the conventional power law of 3. The model of Spingarn and Nix assumes dislocation glide with pile-ups at the grain boundaries. These cause steps on the boundaries, which are removed by grain-boundary diffusion. A fifth power law follows. The agreement in absolute creep rate shown in the original paper arises from a misreading of the tabulated data, and the true predicted creep rate is again far too low. Vacancy diffusion along dislocation cores in the interior of the grains is not likely to dominate grain-boundary diffusion, because the cross section of the dislocation network exceeds that of the grain boundary material only at large grain sizes. While Mecking and Estrin have shown that the vacancy concentration produced mechanically even in dislocation cell walls is likely to exceed that in thermal equilibrium only below 1/2 Tm, it seems possible that the highly mobile interstitials produced mechanically may migrate along dislocations of secondary glide systems to allow vacancy and interstitial dipoles of the primary system to annihilate mutually, with a probable power law of 5. However, the observations of Andrade and of Hanson, which may apply to the regime of power-law breakdown rather than power-law creep, strongly indicate that deformation is localized at the grain boundaries. If this is the case, existing theories of power-law creep based on models of homogeneous deformation are irrelevant; alternatively, the regimes of power-law creep and power-law breakdown must be treated separately.

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