Statistical aspects of microplasticity: experiments, discrete dislocation simulations and stochastic continuum models

The plastic deformation properties of microscale and nanoscale specimens differ from those of their macroscopic counterparts as the discrete nature of the elementary processes governing plastic flow becomes directly visible. In such specimens, details of the initial defect microstructure may exert a...

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Main Author: Zaiser Michael
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: De Gruyter 2013-11-01
Series:Journal of the Mechanical Behavior of Materials
Subjects:
Online Access:https://doi.org/10.1515/jmbm-2012-0006
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spelling doaj-a3e54614e202478b930e99a7f749db732021-10-02T17:53:19ZengDe GruyterJournal of the Mechanical Behavior of Materials0334-89382191-02432013-11-01223-48910010.1515/jmbm-2012-0006Statistical aspects of microplasticity: experiments, discrete dislocation simulations and stochastic continuum modelsZaiser MichaelThe plastic deformation properties of microscale and nanoscale specimens differ from those of their macroscopic counterparts as the discrete nature of the elementary processes governing plastic flow becomes directly visible. In such specimens, details of the initial defect microstructure may exert a strong influence on the recorded deformation behaviour, which accordingly exhibits significant scatter even amongst specimens that share an identical preparation history. The plasticity of microsamples appears as a sequence of spatially and temporally localised events and not as the smooth and continuous flow process envisaged by classical continuum elastoplasticity. These observations pose a significant challenge to constitutive modelling. In this feature article, we discuss the statistics of fluctuations in microscale and nanoscale plasticity and discuss the implications for computational modelling of plastic deformation processes on microscale and nanoscales. We propose a new type of constitutive models that combine a classical continuum description of the elastic problem with a stochastic description of the dynamics of plastic flow.https://doi.org/10.1515/jmbm-2012-0006dislocationsfluctuationsplasticity
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Zaiser Michael
spellingShingle Zaiser Michael
Statistical aspects of microplasticity: experiments, discrete dislocation simulations and stochastic continuum models
Journal of the Mechanical Behavior of Materials
dislocations
fluctuations
plasticity
author_facet Zaiser Michael
author_sort Zaiser Michael
title Statistical aspects of microplasticity: experiments, discrete dislocation simulations and stochastic continuum models
title_short Statistical aspects of microplasticity: experiments, discrete dislocation simulations and stochastic continuum models
title_full Statistical aspects of microplasticity: experiments, discrete dislocation simulations and stochastic continuum models
title_fullStr Statistical aspects of microplasticity: experiments, discrete dislocation simulations and stochastic continuum models
title_full_unstemmed Statistical aspects of microplasticity: experiments, discrete dislocation simulations and stochastic continuum models
title_sort statistical aspects of microplasticity: experiments, discrete dislocation simulations and stochastic continuum models
publisher De Gruyter
series Journal of the Mechanical Behavior of Materials
issn 0334-8938
2191-0243
publishDate 2013-11-01
description The plastic deformation properties of microscale and nanoscale specimens differ from those of their macroscopic counterparts as the discrete nature of the elementary processes governing plastic flow becomes directly visible. In such specimens, details of the initial defect microstructure may exert a strong influence on the recorded deformation behaviour, which accordingly exhibits significant scatter even amongst specimens that share an identical preparation history. The plasticity of microsamples appears as a sequence of spatially and temporally localised events and not as the smooth and continuous flow process envisaged by classical continuum elastoplasticity. These observations pose a significant challenge to constitutive modelling. In this feature article, we discuss the statistics of fluctuations in microscale and nanoscale plasticity and discuss the implications for computational modelling of plastic deformation processes on microscale and nanoscales. We propose a new type of constitutive models that combine a classical continuum description of the elastic problem with a stochastic description of the dynamics of plastic flow.
topic dislocations
fluctuations
plasticity
url https://doi.org/10.1515/jmbm-2012-0006
work_keys_str_mv AT zaisermichael statisticalaspectsofmicroplasticityexperimentsdiscretedislocationsimulationsandstochasticcontinuummodels
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