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Published October 2000 | public
Journal Article

A theory of subgrain dislocation structures

Abstract

We develop a micromechanical theory of dislocation structures and finite deformation single crystal plasticity based on the direct generation of deformation microstructures and the computation of the attendant effective behavior. Specifically, we aim at describing the lamellar dislocation structures which develop at large strains under monotonic loading. These microstructures are regarded as instances of sequential lamination and treated accordingly. The present approach is based on the explicit construction of microstructures by recursive lamination and their subsequent equilibration in order to relax the incremental constitutive description of the material. The microstructures are permitted to evolve in complexity and fineness with increasing macroscopic deformation. The dislocation structures are deduced from the plastic deformation gradient field by recourse to Kröner's formula for the dislocation density tensor. The theory is rendered nonlocal by the consideration of the self-energy of the dislocations. Selected examples demonstrate the ability of the theory to generate complex microstructures, determine the softening effect which those microstructures have on the effective behavior of the crystal, and account for the dependence of the effective behavior on the size of the crystalline sample, or size effect. In this last regard, the theory predicts the effective behavior of the crystal to stiffen with decreasing sample size, in keeping with experiment. In contrast to strain-gradient theories of plasticity, the size effect occurs for nominally uniform macroscopic deformations. Also in contrast to strain-gradient theories, the dimensions of the microstructure depend sensitively on the loading geometry, the extent of macroscopic deformation and the size of the sample.

Additional Information

© 2000 Elsevier. Received 1 April 1999; received in revised form 6 December 1999. The support of the Department of Energy through Caltech's ASCI Center of Excellence for Simulating Dynamic Response of Materials is gratefully acknowledged. LS also wishes to gratefully acknowledge the support from the Belgian Scientific Research Fund (FNRS).

Additional details

Created:
August 21, 2023
Modified:
October 17, 2023