Abstract

The development of new technologies for thethermomechanical processing of metals and the improvement of the existing ones would be unattainable without the use of mathematical models. The physical and mechanical properties of alloys and the performance characteristics of the products made of these alloys are generally determined by the microstructure of materials. In real manufacturing processes, the deformation of metals and alloys occurs when they undergo complex (non-proportional) loading. Under these conditions, the formation of defect substructures, which do not happen at simple (proportional) loading, can take place. This is due to the occurrence of a great number of slip systems activated under loading along complex strain paths, which leads, for instance, to the more intense formation of barriers of different types, including barriers on split dislocations. In these processes, the formation and annihilation of dislocations proceed actively. In this paper, we present a three-level mathematical model that is based on an explicit description of the evolution dislocations density and the formation of dislocations barriers. The model is intended for the description of arbitrary complex loads with an emphasis on complex cyclic deformation.The model is composed of macrolevel (a representative macrovolume of the material that can be considered as an integration point in the finite-element modeling of real constructions), and mesolevel-1 (description of the mechanical response of a crystallite) and mesolevel-2 (description of the defect structure evolution in a crystallite) submodels. Using the model, we have performed a series of numerical experiments on simple and complex, monotonic and cyclic deformations of materials with different stacking fault energies, analyzed the evolution of defect densities, and analyzed the challenges of a relationship between the complexity of loading processes at a macrolevel and the activation of slip systems at low scale levels.

Highlights

  • IntroductionThe problems encountered in the design and manufacture of parts and structures made of metals and alloys (in most cases, polycrystals) require the development of constitutive models capable of describing changes in the physical and mechanical characteristics of materials observed over the broad range of thermomechanical treatment conditions

  • Introduction published maps and institutional affilThe problems encountered in the design and manufacture of parts and structures made of metals and alloys require the development of constitutive models capable of describing changes in the physical and mechanical characteristics of materials observed over the broad range of thermomechanical treatment conditions.Material properties, such as plasticity and strength limits, corrosion resistance, electromagnetic characteristics, etc., are known to be primarily dependent on the structure of materials, and novel models should permit describing microstructure evolution at different structural-scale levels

  • The representative volume (RV) of the macrolevel is assumed to consist of 125 crystallites; distribution of orientations according to a uniform law in the reference configuration is adopted

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Summary

Introduction

The problems encountered in the design and manufacture of parts and structures made of metals and alloys (in most cases, polycrystals) require the development of constitutive models capable of describing changes in the physical and mechanical characteristics of materials observed over the broad range of thermomechanical treatment conditions. Material properties, such as plasticity and strength limits, corrosion resistance, electromagnetic characteristics, etc., are known to be primarily dependent on the structure of materials, and novel models should permit describing microstructure evolution at different structural-scale levels (at the level of grains, subgrains, fragments, cells, and so on). Recent decades have seen steady progress in the development of internal variable models. iations.

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