Abstract

Intergranular ductile fracture is a failure mode that may arise in many metallic alloys used in industrial applications. It manifests as the successive nucleation, growth, and coalescence of cavities at grain boundaries. Thus, simulation of intergranular ductile fracture in polycrystals requires modeling those three different stages at the scale of grain boundaries, i.e. at the interface between two different crystals. In this study, a yield criterion for the coalescence of cavities at the interface between two isotropic materials obeying Mises plasticity is first developed by limit analysis in order to provide some insights into that phenomenon. This criterion is checked against numerical limit analysis under combined tension and shear and is found to agree with unit-cell simulations quantitatively. The model is then extended to crystals so as to account for the complex coupling between loading state, crystallographic orientations, and void microstructure in intergranular coalescence. This second criterion is also assessed through comparisons to numerical limit analysis for an FCC crystal lattice. The agreement is very good in the case of coalescence by internal necking and the trends displayed by coalescence under combined tension and shear are captured correctly. Some implications of the model on the competition between transgranular and intergranular ductile fracture are discussed. Finally, by combining this model with an existing criterion for void growth at grain boundaries, a multi-surface yield function relevant to intergranular ductile fracture is obtained and compared to unit-cell simulations.

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