Abstract

Jerky flow in alloys, or the Portevin-Le Chatelier effect, presents an outstanding example of self-organization phenomena in plasticity. Recent acoustic emission investigations revealed that its microscopic dynamics is governed by scale invariance manifested as power-law statistics of intermittent events. As the macroscopic stress serrations show both scale invariance and characteristic scales, the micro-macro transition is an intricate question requiring an assessment of intermediate behaviors. The first attempt of such an investigation is undertaken in the present paper by virtue of a one-dimensional (1D) local extensometry technique and statistical analysis of time series. The data obtained complete the missing link and bear evidence to a coexistence of characteristic large events and power laws for smaller events. The scale separation is interpreted in terms of the phenomena of self-organized criticality and synchronization in complex systems. Furthermore, it is found that both the stress serrations and local strain-rate bursts agree with the so-called fluctuation scaling related to general mathematical laws and unifying various specific mechanisms proposed to explain scale invariance in diverse systems. Prospects of further investigations including the duality manifested by a wavy spatial organization of the local bursts of plastic deformation are discussed.

Highlights

  • Plastic flow of alloys is prone to instability caused by the interaction of mobile dislocations with solute atoms diffusing in their elastic fields, or dynamic strain aging (DSA) [1]

  • The propagation is explicitly demonstrated in plots (c), (b), and (d): Figure 1b shows a step-wise character of εi (t) dependences for three local extensometers (data for other extensometers, as well as raw xi (t) records, are not shown); Figure 1c presents the corresponding εi (t) curves

  • The analysis of deformation curves leads to a distinction of two qualitatively different cases, one corresponding to a single power-law dependence and another revealing a crossover between two power laws

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Summary

Introduction

Plastic flow of alloys is prone to instability caused by the interaction of mobile dislocations with solute atoms diffusing in their elastic fields, or dynamic strain aging (DSA) [1]. In tensile tests with a constant applied strain rate, εa , this nonlinearity must give rise to stress serrations caused by repetitive strain-rate jumps within localized deformation bands [2,3,4,5,6,7,8,9,10,11,12,13]. Such jerky flow is observed in various alloys and is well-known as the Portevin-Le Chatelier, or PLC, effect [14]. The intrinsic strain heterogeneity leads to complex behaviors of real materials

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