4.7 Article

Stochastic modeling of twin nucleation in polycrystals: An application in hexagonal close-packed metals

Journal

INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL OF PLASTICITY
Volume 56, Issue -, Pages 119-138

Publisher

PERGAMON-ELSEVIER SCIENCE LTD
DOI: 10.1016/j.ijplas.2013.11.005

Keywords

Twinning; Hcp; Stochastic; Probability; Constitutive modeling

Funding

  1. U.S. Department of Energy, Office of Science, Basic Energy Science [FWP 06SCPE401]
  2. National Nuclear Security Administration of the U.S. DOE [DE-AC52-06NA25396]

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Twinning in hexagonal close-packed (hcp) metals is a multi-scale process that depends on the microstructural and mechanical response details at the polycrystalline aggregate, grain, micro, and atomic scales. Twinning can generally be regarded as a two-step process, a nucleation event followed by propagation and growth. This articles presents a stochastic model for the nucleation of deformation twins in hcp polycrystals. Twin nucleation is modeled through its dependence on lower length scale material details, such as the defect configurations at potential nucleation sites within grain boundaries, and mechanical details such as highly localized stress concentrations at the microscale in a probabilistic manner. These two aspects, the material and mechanical, must align for a successful nucleation event. The nucleation process is cast as a survival model parameterized by the local stress at the grain boundary. The model gives an explicit form for the probability distribution for the critical stress values required for twin nucleation. The model is implemented into a viscoplastic self-consistent (VPSC) crystal plasticity framework in order to test its predictive capability against previously reported statistical characterization in deformed zirconium at multiple temperatures. For implementation in VPSC, the stress concentrations are sampled from a distribution calibrated to full-field crystal plasticity simulations and a three-dimensional model of grain neighbors and distribution of grain boundary areas are implemented.(c) 2013 Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved.

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