Grain-size-independent plastic flow at ultrahigh pressures and strain rates

A basic tenet of material science is that the flow stress of a metal increases as its grain size decreases, an effect described by the Hall-Petch relation. This relation is used extensively in material design to optimize the hardness, durability, survivability, and ductility of structural metals. Th...

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Veröffentlicht in:Physical review letters 2015-02, Vol.114 (6), p.065502-065502, Article 065502
Hauptverfasser: Park, H-S, Rudd, R E, Cavallo, R M, Barton, N R, Arsenlis, A, Belof, J L, Blobaum, K J M, El-dasher, B S, Florando, J N, Huntington, C M, Maddox, B R, May, M J, Plechaty, C, Prisbrey, S T, Remington, B A, Wallace, R J, Wehrenberg, C E, Wilson, M J, Comley, A J, Giraldez, E, Nikroo, A, Farrell, M, Randall, G, Gray, 3rd, G T
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:A basic tenet of material science is that the flow stress of a metal increases as its grain size decreases, an effect described by the Hall-Petch relation. This relation is used extensively in material design to optimize the hardness, durability, survivability, and ductility of structural metals. This Letter reports experimental results in a new regime of high pressures and strain rates that challenge this basic tenet of mechanical metallurgy. We report measurements of the plastic flow of the model body-centered-cubic metal tantalum made under conditions of high pressure (>100  GPa) and strain rate (∼10(7)  s(-1)) achieved by using the Omega laser. Under these unique plastic deformation ("flow") conditions, the effect of grain size is found to be negligible for grain sizes >0.25  μm sizes. A multiscale model of the plastic flow suggests that pressure and strain rate hardening dominate over the grain-size effects. Theoretical estimates, based on grain compatibility and geometrically necessary dislocations, corroborate this conclusion.
ISSN:0031-9007
1079-7114
DOI:10.1103/PhysRevLett.114.065502