Abstract

Many important processing techniques for nanocrystalline solids, such as ball milling and compaction, are frequently accompanied by the presence of voids in the end products. These voids can apparently lower the yield strength of the material. In order to address the issue of competition between grain size and porosity, we develop an explicit, analytical composite model that allows us to determine the viscoplastic response of a porous, nanocrystalline solid. The development made use of the concept of a three-phase composite comprising of the plastically harder grain interior, plastically softer grain-boundary affected zone (GBAZ), and porosity. A homogenization theory that accounts for the evolution of porosity during plastic flow is established. This establishment is built upon the extension of a linear viscoelastic composite to a non-linear viscoplastic one, in which the viscoplastic behavior of the constituent phases is represented by a unified constitutive law. Then by means of a field fluctuation method, the local strain rates are linked to the applied total strain rate. Such a linkage in turn provides the secant viscosity of the constituent phases at every stage of deformation. In order to test the applicability of the developed theory, we have applied it to model the viscoplastic response of an iron and an iron–copper mixture tested by Khan et al. [Khan, A.S., Zhang, H., Takacs, L., 2000. Mechanical response and modeling of fully compacted nanocrystalline iron and copper. Int. J. Plasticity 16, 1459–1476] and Khan and Zhang [Khan, A.S., Zhang, H., 2000. Mechanically alloyed nanocrystalline iron and copper mixture: behavior and constitutive modeling over a wide range of strain rates. Int. J. Plasticity 16, 1477–1492]. It is demonstrated that the theory is capable of capturing the major features of the tested results at various grain sizes and porosities. Our calculations further point to the change of yield strength in the Hall–Petch plot from an initial increase to level off, and then to decline, at various porosities under a constant strain-rate loading. This in turn brings about the existence of a critical grain size in the nano-meter range at which the material exhibits maximum yield strength. Moreover, this critical grain size tends to move to the left in the Hall–Petch plot as the GBAZ becomes softer.

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