4.7 Article

First-principles prediction of yield stress for basal slip in Mg-Al alloys

Journal

ACTA MATERIALIA
Volume 60, Issue 13-14, Pages 5197-5203

Publisher

PERGAMON-ELSEVIER SCIENCE LTD
DOI: 10.1016/j.actamat.2012.06.020

Keywords

Mg basal edge; Al solutes; Solute strengthening; Yield strength

Funding

  1. GM/Brown Collaborative Research Lab on Computational Materials Research
  2. NSF Materials Research Science and Engineering Center at Brown on Micro- and Nano-Mechanics of Materials [DMR-0520651]
  3. Brown University

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The finite-temperature yield stress of Mg-Al alloys undergoing basal slip is investigated using a recently developed parameter-free solute strengthening model. The model takes input from first-principles calculations of the dislocation/solute interaction energy and evaluates the solute strengthening due to fluctuations in solute concentration, taking into account the correlation of these fluctuations as a function of dislocation roughening. Due to the wide partial separation of the Mg basal edge dislocation, a smaller roughening is required to decorrelate the solute fluctuations in the partials compared to that required to decorrelate the fluctuations in the far field. As a consequence, the dislocation has two stable configurations in the random field of solutes, corresponding to short-range and long-range solute interactions. The configuration of the short-range interactions control the strength at low temperatures or high stress, whereas the long-range interactions control the strength at higher temperatures or lower stresses. Predictions of the model are in very good agreement with experiments over a wide range of solute concentrations and temperature. In particular, the model naturally predicts the plateau stress observed at high temperatures, which is attributable to the long-range solute interactions. (c) 2012 Acta Materialia Inc. Published by Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved.

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