Dislocation assisted coarsening of coherent precipitates: a phase field study
Coarsening of precipitates in coherent systems is influenced by the elastic fields of the precipitates and the interfacial curvature. It is also known that if precipitates are connected by dislocations, coarsening is affected by the elastic fields of the dislocations and the pipe diffusivity. Althou...
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Zusammenfassung: | Coarsening of precipitates in coherent systems is influenced by the elastic
fields of the precipitates and the interfacial curvature. It is also known that
if precipitates are connected by dislocations, coarsening is affected by the
elastic fields of the dislocations and the pipe diffusivity. Although there is
experimental evidence of accelerated coarsening in the presence of
dislocations, these studies do not capture the effect of the elastic fields.
There exist generic theoretical models that can predict the average sizes and
size distributions of coarsening precipitates considering the coherency related
elastic stress fields. In this paper, we use a phase field model to study the
coarsening of precipitates connected by dislocations, incorporating its elastic
fields and pipe diffusivity. Specifically, we study the effects of misfit
strain, elastic moduli mismatch, faster pipe mobility and the elastic fields of
the dislocation on the morphology and kinetics of the coarsening precipitates.
The dilatational component, associated with the edge character of the
dislocations interact with the precipitates in an elastically homogeneous
system. In an elastically inhomogeneous system, the deviatoric elastic fields
also interact with the precipitates influencing the morphology and kinetics of
coarsening precipitates. The kinetics of coarsening is different as well, with
hard precipitates coarsening faster as compared to soft precipitates, when
connected by dislocations. Further, we note that the modified Gibbs-Thomson
equation, which was originally derived for an isolated precipitate in an
infinite matrix, is also applicable for coarsening precipitates at close
proximity. |
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DOI: | 10.48550/arxiv.2401.04382 |