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On the strength of dislocation interactions and their effect on latent hardening in pure Magnesium

journal contribution
posted on 2014-11-01, 00:00 authored by N Bertin, C N Tome, I J Beyerlein, Matthew BarnettMatthew Barnett, L Capolungo
This study is dedicated to the quantification of latent hardening and its effect on the
plasticity of pure hexagonal magnesium. To this end, discrete dislocation dynamics simulations are used to (1) extract latent hardening parameters coupling different slip systems, and to (2) assess the validity of two existing constitutive models linking slip system strength to dislocation densities on all slip systems. As hexagonal materials deform via activation of different slip modes, each with different mobilities and lattice friction stress, the effects of the latter on latent hardening evolution are also investigated. It is found that the multi-slip formulation proposed by Franciosi and Zaoui gives accurate predictions when multiple interactions are involved while the formulation suggested by Lavrentev and Pokhil systematically overestimates the flow stress. Similar to FCC materials, it is also found that collinear interactions potentially contribute the most to latent hardening. Basal/pyramidal c + a interactions are found to be very strong, while interactions involving second-order pyramidal c + a primary dislocations appear to be the weakest ones. Finally, the latent hardening parameters, extracted from the discrete dislocation dynamics simulations, are used in polycrystal simulations and the impact of finely accounting for latent hardening on predictions of the macroscopic anisotropic response is shown to be of significant importance.

History

Journal

International Journal of Plasticity

Volume

62

Pagination

72 - 92

Publisher

Elsevier

Location

Amsterdam, The Netherlands

ISSN

1879-2154

Language

eng

Publication classification

C Journal article; C1 Refereed article in a scholarly journal

Copyright notice

2014, Elsevier