Abstract

Void nucleation is of great significance in understanding ductile fracture. Recent experiments have shown that voids are nucleated via vacancy condensation and dislocation boundaries are the main nucleation sites. However, it is unclear what role is played exactly by dislocation boundaries in promoting void nucleation. Here we propose a new mechanism for dislocation boundary-induced void nucleation and develop a corresponding model based on the classical nucleation theory and vacancy diffusion theory. The model suggests that void nucleation is mainly influenced by hydrostatic stress, temperature, and relative vacancy concentration, whose contributions are systematically studied. It is also suggested that the vacancy formation energy and the interaction energy of hydrostatic stress and vacancy, which are absent in the previous models and introduced in ours, exhibit a clear tendency to lower the activation free energy barrier. Analysis of the nucleation kinetic suggests that the growth rate of void depends on the vacancy diffusion coefficient and vacancy concentration; the higher the values of these parameters, the faster the growth rate of the void. The kinetic feasibility of the newly proposed mechanism is examined using three-dimensional discrete dislocation dynamics simulations. The results predict that the size of incipient voids nucleated at the dislocation boundary is ∼35 nm, which is consistent with the experimental characterization value of ∼50 nm. Finally, when the relaxation of the dislocation boundary is considered, the synergistic effect is weakened.

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