Dislocation multi-junctions and strain hardening

被引:272
作者
Bulatov, VV [1 ]
Hsiung, LL
Tang, M
Arsenlis, A
Bartelt, MC
Cai, W
Florando, JN
Hiratani, M
Rhee, M
Hommes, G
Pierce, TG
de la Rubia, TD
机构
[1] Lawrence Livermore Natl Lab, Livermore, CA 94550 USA
[2] Stanford Univ, Dept Mech Engn, Stanford, CA 94305 USA
关键词
D O I
10.1038/nature04658
中图分类号
O [数理科学和化学]; P [天文学、地球科学]; Q [生物科学]; N [自然科学总论];
学科分类号
07 ; 0710 ; 09 ;
摘要
At the microscopic scale, the strength of a crystal derives from the motion, multiplication and interaction of distinctive line defects called dislocations. First proposed theoretically in 1934 (refs 1-3) to explain low magnitudes of crystal strength observed experimentally, the existence of dislocations was confirmed two decades later(4,5). Much of the research in dislocation physics has since focused on dislocation interactions and their role in strain hardening, a common phenomenon in which continued deformation increases a crystal's strength. The existing theory relates strain hardening to pair-wise dislocation reactions in which two intersecting dislocations form junctions that tie the dislocations together(6,7). Here we report that interactions among three dislocations result in the formation of unusual elements of dislocation network topology, termed 'multi-junctions'. We first predict the existence of multi-junctions using dislocation dynamics and atomistic simulations and then confirm their existence by transmission electron microscopy experiments in single-crystal molybdenum. In large-scale dislocation dynamics simulations, multi-junctions present very strong, nearly indestructible, obstacles to dislocation motion and furnish new sources for dislocation multiplication, thereby playing an essential role in the evolution of dislocation microstructure and strength of deforming crystals(8). Simulation analyses conclude that multi-junctions are responsible for the strong orientation dependence of strain hardening in body-centred cubic crystals.
引用
收藏
页码:1174 / 1178
页数:5
相关论文
共 20 条
[1]   Simulating materials failure by using up to one billion atoms and the world's fastest computer: Work-hardening [J].
Abraham, FF ;
Walkup, R ;
Gao, HJ ;
Duchaineau, M ;
De la Rubia, TD ;
Seager, M .
PROCEEDINGS OF THE NATIONAL ACADEMY OF SCIENCES OF THE UNITED STATES OF AMERICA, 2002, 99 (09) :5783-5787
[2]  
Basinski S. J., 1979, Dislocations in solids, vol.IV. Dislocations in metallurgy, P261
[3]  
BULATOV VV, 2004, SUPERCOMPUTING
[4]   A SIMPLE EMPIRICAL N-BODY POTENTIAL FOR TRANSITION-METALS [J].
FINNIS, MW ;
SINCLAIR, JE .
PHILOSOPHICAL MAGAZINE A-PHYSICS OF CONDENSED MATTER STRUCTURE DEFECTS AND MECHANICAL PROPERTIES, 1984, 50 (01) :45-55
[5]   LATENT HARDENING IN COPPER AND ALUMINUM SINGLE-CRYSTALS [J].
FRANCIOSI, P ;
BERVEILLER, M ;
ZAOUI, A .
ACTA METALLURGICA, 1980, 28 (03) :273-283
[6]   MULTIPLICATION PROCESSES FOR SLOW MOVING DISLOCATIONS [J].
FRANK, FC ;
READ, WT .
PHYSICAL REVIEW, 1950, 79 (04) :722-723
[7]   Affine covariant-contravariant vector forms for the elastic field of parametric dislocations in isotropic crystals [J].
Ghoniem, NM ;
Huang, JM ;
Wang, ZQ .
PHILOSOPHICAL MAGAZINE LETTERS, 2002, 82 (02) :55-63
[8]   EFFECT OF ORIENTATION ON YIELDING AND FLOW OF MOLYBDENUM SINGLE CRYSTALS [J].
GUIU, F ;
PRATT, PL .
PHYSICA STATUS SOLIDI, 1966, 15 (02) :539-&
[9]   Dislocation dynamics and work hardening of fractal dislocation cell structures [J].
Hähner, P ;
Zaiser, M .
MATERIALS SCIENCE AND ENGINEERING A-STRUCTURAL MATERIALS PROPERTIES MICROSTRUCTURE AND PROCESSING, 1999, 272 (02) :443-454
[10]   DIRECT OBSERVATIONS OF THE ARRANGEMENT AND MOTION OF DISLOCATIONS IN ALUMINUM [J].
HIRSCH, PB ;
HORNE, RW ;
WHELAN, MJ .
PHILOSOPHICAL MAGAZINE, 1956, 1 (07) :677-&