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Dislocation Mechanics of Metal Plasticity and Fracturing



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Autore: Armstrong Ronald W Visualizza persona
Titolo: Dislocation Mechanics of Metal Plasticity and Fracturing Visualizza cluster
Pubblicazione: Basel, Switzerland, : MDPI - Multidisciplinary Digital Publishing Institute, 2020
Descrizione fisica: 1 electronic resource (188 p.)
Soggetto topico: Research & information: general
Soggetto non controllato: dislocation mechanics
yield strength
grain size
thermal activation
strain rate
impact tests
brittleness transition
fracturing
crack size
fracture mechanics
Hall-Petch equation
Griffith equation
size effect
mechanical strength
pearlitic steels
suspension bridge cables
dislocation microstructure
fractal analysis
plasticity
representative volume element
dislocation structure
dislocation correlations
dislocation avalanches
nanotwin
nanograin
Au–Cu alloy
micro-compression
Cu-Zr
ECAP
deformation
quasi-stationary
subgrains
grains
coarsening
Cu–Zr
ultrafine-grained material
dynamic recovery
transient
load change tests
Charpy impact test
GMAW
additive manufacturing
secondary cracks
anisotropy
linear flow splitting
crystal plasticity
DAMASK
texture
EBSD
crack tip dislocations
TEM
grain rotation
fatigue
dislocation configurations
residual stress
indentation
serration
temperature
dislocation
artificial aging
solid solution
loading curvature
aluminum alloy
holistic approach
dislocation group dynamics
dynamic factor
dislocation pile-up
yield stress
dislocation creep
fatigue crack growth rate
Persona (resp. second.): ArmstrongRonald W
Sommario/riassunto: The modern understanding of metal plasticity and fracturing began about 100 years ago, with pioneering work; first, on crack-induced fracturing by Griffith and, second, with the invention of dislocation-enhanced crystal plasticity by Taylor, Orowan and Polanyi. The modern counterparts are fracture mechanics, as invented by Irwin, and dislocation mechanics, as initiated in pioneering work by Cottrell. No less important was the breakthrough development of optical characterization of sectioned polycrystalline metal microstructures started by Sorby in the late 19th century and leading eventually to modern optical, x-ray and electron microscopy methods for assessments of crystal fracture surfaces, via fractography, and particularly of x-ray and electron microscopy techniques applied to quantitative characterizations of internal dislocation behaviors. A major current effort is to match computational simulations of metal deformation/fracturing behaviors with experimental measurements made over extended ranges of microstructures and over varying external conditions of stress-state, temperature and loading rate. The relation of such simulations to the development of constitutive equations for a hoped-for predictive description of material deformation/fracturing behaviors is an active topic of research. The present collection of articles provides a broad sampling of research accomplishments on the two subjects.
Titolo autorizzato: Dislocation Mechanics of Metal Plasticity and Fracturing  Visualizza cluster
Formato: Materiale a stampa
Livello bibliografico Monografia
Lingua di pubblicazione: Inglese
Record Nr.: 9910557594903321
Lo trovi qui: Univ. Federico II
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