Abstract

Dual-phase (DP) steel's spread in the industry has been fueled by its highly desirable qualities, which include a unique balance of strength and ductility, making it a valuable material for applications ranging from automotive manufacturing to construction. Despite the continued progress in the research of DP steels, the complex failure mechanisms at the microscale, resulting from the coexistence of brittle martensite phases within the ductile ferrite phase, remain an area of ongoing exploration. This study aims to investigate the micro structural evolution, as well as crack initiation and propagation, in DP steels at the microscale. In this context, to accurately capture the microstructural evolution of DP steels, a rate-dependent crystal plasticity formulation is utilized for the ferrite phase alongside a phenomenological isotropic J2 plasticity model for the martensite phase. A novel ductile phase-field fracture framework has been implemented to predict crack initiation and propagation, integrating both crystal plasticity and J2 plasticity constitutive models with the phase field fracture model. Generic 3D polycrystalline Representative Volume Elements (RVEs) are created and simulated to analyze the trends influencing the failure behavior of DP steels. The numerical study includes examples with two different martensite volume fractions (15% and 37%), each characterized by varying random crystallographic orientation sets and morphologies. The obtained results suggest that despite the similarity in stress concentration regions within two different random orientation sets in a simulation with fixed volume fraction and morphology, the resulting crack paths exhibit significant differences. Additionally, it is inferred that damage appears to accumulate at the junction points of the martensite islands. Moreover, an increase in the martensite volume fraction is found to diminish the influence of crystallographic orientation on the resultant crack path. Therefore, given the aforementioned findings, it is essential to analyze the microstructural evolution, as well as crack initiation and propagation in DP steels, utilizing appropriate material and fracture modeling frameworks at the microscale.

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