Predicting the size scaling in strength of nanolayered materials by a discrete slip crystal plasticity model

The main attraction of metallic nanolayered composites (MNCs) lies not only with their five-to ten-fold increases in strength over that of their constituents, but also in the tunability of their superior strength with nanolayer thickness. While the size scaling in strength prevails in many MNC mater...

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Veröffentlicht in:International journal of plasticity 2020-01, Vol.124, p.247-260
Hauptverfasser: Chen, Tianju, Yuan, Rui, Beyerlein, Irene J., Zhou, Caizhi
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:The main attraction of metallic nanolayered composites (MNCs) lies not only with their five-to ten-fold increases in strength over that of their constituents, but also in the tunability of their superior strength with nanolayer thickness. While the size scaling in strength prevails in many MNC material systems, the size scaling cannot be accurately predicted with crystal plasticity framework. Here, we present a crystal plasticity based computational method that considers plasticity to occur in grain boundary-controlled discrete slip events and apply it to predict the deformation response and underlying mechanisms in Cu/Nb MNCs. Predicted tensile stress-strain responses are shown to achieve agreement with measurements for four distinct nanolayer thicknesses, without introducing adjustable parameters. The model predicts the Hall-Petch size scaling of strength on layer thickness and the rising plastic anisotropy as the layer thickness reduces. Analysis of the results indicates that the origin of the layer size effect on strength results from the limits layer thickness places on the lengths of dislocations sources lying in the grain boundaries. •We develop a discrete slip crystal plasticity (DS-CP) framework incorporating a statistical grain boundary dislocation source model.•The model is applied to study strain hardening and layer size-dependent strength and plastic anisotropy in a metallic nanolayered Cu/Nb composite.•Without introducing any non-material, adjustable parameters, the DS-CP model achieves good agreement with experimental yield strength and layer thickness, flow response, and plastic anisotropy.•The predicted activation volumes associated with dislocation emission from the grain boundaries also agree with experimental measurements.•Analysis indicates that the origin of the composite layer size effect results from the limits layer thickness places on the lengths of dislocations sources lying in the grain boundaries.
ISSN:0749-6419
1879-2154
DOI:10.1016/j.ijplas.2019.08.016