Geometry of polycrystals and microstructure

We investigate the geometry of polycrystals, showing that for polycrystals formed of convex grains the interior grains are polyhedral, while for polycrystals with general grain geometry the set of triple points is small. Then we investigate possible martensitic morphologies resulting from intergrain...

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Main Authors: Ball John M., Carstensen Carsten
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: EDP Sciences 2015-01-01
Series:MATEC Web of Conferences
Online Access:http://dx.doi.org/10.1051/matecconf/20153302007
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spelling doaj-2d87b6b59e364f809596e2699c6217172021-02-02T06:55:54ZengEDP SciencesMATEC Web of Conferences2261-236X2015-01-01330200710.1051/matecconf/20153302007matecconf_esomat2015_02007Geometry of polycrystals and microstructureBall John M.0Carstensen Carsten1Mathematical Institute, University of Oxford, Andrew Wiles Building, Radcliffe Observatory QuarterDepartment of Mathematics, Humboldt-Universität zu BerlinWe investigate the geometry of polycrystals, showing that for polycrystals formed of convex grains the interior grains are polyhedral, while for polycrystals with general grain geometry the set of triple points is small. Then we investigate possible martensitic morphologies resulting from intergrain contact. For cubic-totetragonal transformations we show that homogeneous zero-energy microstructures matching a pure dilatation on a grain boundary necessarily involve more than four deformation gradients. We discuss the relevance of this result for observations of microstructures involving second and third-order laminates in various materials. Finally we consider the more specialized situation of bicrystals formed from materials having two martensitic energy wells (such as for orthorhombic to monoclinic transformations), but without any restrictions on the possible microstructure, showing how a generalization of the Hadamard jump condition can be applied at the intergrain boundary to show that a pure phase in either grain is impossible at minimum energy.http://dx.doi.org/10.1051/matecconf/20153302007
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Ball John M.
Carstensen Carsten
spellingShingle Ball John M.
Carstensen Carsten
Geometry of polycrystals and microstructure
MATEC Web of Conferences
author_facet Ball John M.
Carstensen Carsten
author_sort Ball John M.
title Geometry of polycrystals and microstructure
title_short Geometry of polycrystals and microstructure
title_full Geometry of polycrystals and microstructure
title_fullStr Geometry of polycrystals and microstructure
title_full_unstemmed Geometry of polycrystals and microstructure
title_sort geometry of polycrystals and microstructure
publisher EDP Sciences
series MATEC Web of Conferences
issn 2261-236X
publishDate 2015-01-01
description We investigate the geometry of polycrystals, showing that for polycrystals formed of convex grains the interior grains are polyhedral, while for polycrystals with general grain geometry the set of triple points is small. Then we investigate possible martensitic morphologies resulting from intergrain contact. For cubic-totetragonal transformations we show that homogeneous zero-energy microstructures matching a pure dilatation on a grain boundary necessarily involve more than four deformation gradients. We discuss the relevance of this result for observations of microstructures involving second and third-order laminates in various materials. Finally we consider the more specialized situation of bicrystals formed from materials having two martensitic energy wells (such as for orthorhombic to monoclinic transformations), but without any restrictions on the possible microstructure, showing how a generalization of the Hadamard jump condition can be applied at the intergrain boundary to show that a pure phase in either grain is impossible at minimum energy.
url http://dx.doi.org/10.1051/matecconf/20153302007
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AT carstensencarsten geometryofpolycrystalsandmicrostructure
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