4.6 Article

Grain size constraints on twin expansion in hexagonal close packed crystals

Journal

JOURNAL OF APPLIED PHYSICS
Volume 120, Issue 15, Pages -

Publisher

AMER INST PHYSICS
DOI: 10.1063/1.4965719

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Funding

  1. U.S. Dept. of Energy, Office of Basic Energy Sciences [FWP 06SCPE401]

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Deformation twins are stress-induced transformed domains of lamellar shape that form when polycrystalline hexagonal close packed metals, like Mg, are strained. Several studies have reported that the propensity of deformation twinning reduces as grain size decreases. Here, we use a 3D crystal plasticity based micromechanics model to calculate the effect of grain size on the driving forces responsible for expanding twin lamellae. The calculations reveal that constraints from the neighboring grain where the grain boundary and twin lamella meet induce a stress reversal in the twin lamella. A pronounced grain size effect arises as reductions in grain size cause these stress-reversal fields from twin/grain boundary junctions to affect twin growth. We further show that the severity of this neighboring grain constraint depends on the crystallographic orientation and plastic response of the neighboring grain. We show that these stress-reversal fields from twin/grain boundary junctions will affect twin growth, below a critical parent grain size. These results reveal an unconventional yet influential role that grain size and grain neighbors can play on deformation twinning. Published by AIP Publishing.

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