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Size effects and idealized dislocation microstructure at small scales: Predictions of a Phenomenological model of Mesoscopic Field Dislocation Mechanics: Part II
Authors:Anish Roy
Institution:Civil and Environmental Engineering, Carnegie Mellon University, Pittsburgh, PA 15213, USA
Abstract:In Part I of this set of two papers, a model of mesoscopic plasticity is developed for studying initial-boundary value problems of small scale plasticity. Here we make qualitative, finite element method-based computational predictions of the theory. We demonstrate size effects and the development of strong inhomogeneity in simple shearing of plastically constrained grains. Non-locality in elastic straining leading to a strong Bauschinger effect is analyzed. Low shear strain boundary layers in constrained simple shearing of infinite layers of polycrystalline materials are not predicted by the model, and we justify the result based on an examination of the no-dislocation-flow boundary condition. The time-dependent, spatially homogeneous, simple shearing solution of PMFDM is studied numerically. The computational results and an analysis of continuous dependence with respect to initial data of solutions for a model linear problem point to the need for a nonlinear study of a stability transition of the homogeneous solution with decreasing grain size and increasing applied deformation. The continuous-dependence analysis also points to a possible mechanism for the development of spatial inhomogeneity in the initial stages of deformation in lower-order gradient plasticity theory. Results from thermal cycling of small scale beams/films with different degrees of constraint to plastic flow are presented showing size effects and reciprocal-film-thickness scaling of dislocation density boundary layer width. Qualitative similarities with results from discrete dislocation analyses are noted where possible.We discuss the convergence of approximate solutions with mesh refinement and its implications for the prediction of dislocation microstructure development, motivated by the notion of measure-valued solutions to conservation laws.
Keywords:Mesoscopic  Dislocation mechanics  Plasticity  Finite elements
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