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    An Assessment of the Evolving Microstructural Model of Inelasticity Coupled With Dislocation- and Disclination-Based Incompatibilities

    Source: Journal of Engineering Materials and Technology:;2019:;volume 141:;issue 004::page 41009
    Author:
    Adedoyin, A. A.
    ,
    Enakoutsa, K.
    ,
    Bammann, D. J.
    DOI: 10.1115/1.4043627
    Publisher: American Society of Mechanical Engineers (ASME)
    Abstract: The evolving microstructural model of inelasticity (EMMI) previously developed as an improvement over the Bammann–Chiesa–Johnson (BCJ) material model is well known to describe the macroscopic nonlinear behavior of polycrystalline metals subjected to rapid external loads such as those encountered during high-rate events possibly near shock regime. The improved model accounts for deformation mechanisms such as thermally activated dislocation motion, generation, annihilation, and drag. It also accounts for the effects of material texture, recrystallization and grain growth and void nucleation, growth, and coalescence. The material incompatibilities, previously disregard in the aforementioned model, manifest themselves as structural misorientation where ductile failure often initiates are currently being considered. To proceed, the representation of material incompatibility is introduced into the EMMI model by incorporating the distribution of the geometrically necessary defects such as dislocations and disclination. To assess the newly proposed formulation, classical elastic solutions of benchmarks problems including far-field stress applied to the boundary of body containing a defect, e.g., voids, cracks, and dislocations, are used to compute the plastic velocity gradient for various states of the material in terms of assumed values of the internal state variables. The full-field state of the inelastic flow is then computed, and the spatial dependence of the dislocations and disclination density is determined. The predicted results shows good agreement with finding of dislocation theory.
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      An Assessment of the Evolving Microstructural Model of Inelasticity Coupled With Dislocation- and Disclination-Based Incompatibilities

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    http://yetl.yabesh.ir/yetl1/handle/yetl/4257924
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    contributor authorAdedoyin, A. A.
    contributor authorEnakoutsa, K.
    contributor authorBammann, D. J.
    date accessioned2019-09-18T09:01:06Z
    date available2019-09-18T09:01:06Z
    date copyright5/28/2019 12:00:00 AM
    date issued2019
    identifier issn0094-4289
    identifier othermats_141_4_041009
    identifier urihttp://yetl.yabesh.ir/yetl1/handle/yetl/4257924
    description abstractThe evolving microstructural model of inelasticity (EMMI) previously developed as an improvement over the Bammann–Chiesa–Johnson (BCJ) material model is well known to describe the macroscopic nonlinear behavior of polycrystalline metals subjected to rapid external loads such as those encountered during high-rate events possibly near shock regime. The improved model accounts for deformation mechanisms such as thermally activated dislocation motion, generation, annihilation, and drag. It also accounts for the effects of material texture, recrystallization and grain growth and void nucleation, growth, and coalescence. The material incompatibilities, previously disregard in the aforementioned model, manifest themselves as structural misorientation where ductile failure often initiates are currently being considered. To proceed, the representation of material incompatibility is introduced into the EMMI model by incorporating the distribution of the geometrically necessary defects such as dislocations and disclination. To assess the newly proposed formulation, classical elastic solutions of benchmarks problems including far-field stress applied to the boundary of body containing a defect, e.g., voids, cracks, and dislocations, are used to compute the plastic velocity gradient for various states of the material in terms of assumed values of the internal state variables. The full-field state of the inelastic flow is then computed, and the spatial dependence of the dislocations and disclination density is determined. The predicted results shows good agreement with finding of dislocation theory.
    publisherAmerican Society of Mechanical Engineers (ASME)
    titleAn Assessment of the Evolving Microstructural Model of Inelasticity Coupled With Dislocation- and Disclination-Based Incompatibilities
    typeJournal Paper
    journal volume141
    journal issue4
    journal titleJournal of Engineering Materials and Technology
    identifier doi10.1115/1.4043627
    journal fristpage41009
    journal lastpage041009-20
    treeJournal of Engineering Materials and Technology:;2019:;volume 141:;issue 004
    contenttypeFulltext
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    DSpace software copyright © 2002-2015  DuraSpace
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