Abstract

The design of optimal microstructures requires first, the identification of microstructural features that influence the material’s properties and, then, a search for a combination of these features that give rise to desired properties. For microstructures with complex morphologies, where the number of features is large, deriving these structure–property relationships is a challenging task. To address this challenge, we propose a generative machine learning model that can automatically identify low-dimensional descriptors of microstructural features that can be used to establish structure–property relationships. Based on this model, we present an integrated, data-driven framework for microstructure characterization, reconstruction, and design that is applicable to heterogeneous materials with polycrystalline microstructures. The proposed method is evaluated on a case study of designing dual-phase steel microstructures created with the multi-level Voronoi tessellation method. To this end, we train a variational autoencoder to identify the descriptors from these synthetic dual-phase steel microstructures. Subsequently, we employ Bayesian optimization to search for the optimal combination of the descriptors and generate microstructures with specific yield stress and low susceptibility for damage initiation. The presented results show how microstructure descriptors, determined by the variational autoencoder model, act as design variables for an optimization algorithm that identifies microstructures with desired properties.

Full Text
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