Modelling ductile fracture in an Al alloy with crystal plasticity models
Permanent lenke
https://hdl.handle.net/10037/36114Dato
2024-04-24Type
Journal articleTidsskriftartikkel
Peer reviewed
Sammendrag
Crystal plasticity models enhanced with coupled or uncoupled damage and fracture
criteria give an opportunity to account for the role of microstructure in ductile fracture, most
directly representing the local variations of stress and strain fields inside and between the grains,
voids and particles. Some computationally efficient crystal plasticity, damage and fracture models
have recently been developed and applied to some cases of polycrystalline fracture. Such models
allow to investigate in a direct way the effects of, e.g., shear bands, larger voids, particles, free
surfaces and load direction on the development of damage and fracture. The cast and homogenized
Al1.2Mn alloy investigated previously is used here as a basis for simulations. The alloy has an
equiaxed grain structure with no texture and contains a population of larger particles and a
population of dispersoids. The grain structure and the large particles are modelled directly in the
finite element model, while the effect of dispersoids is represented by the damage and fracture part
of the single crystal plasticity model. The study investigates the effect of different model
parameters and features on the global and local behaviour of the material during localization and
fracture, in light of available experimental data.
Forlag
Materials Research ForumSitering
Khadyko M, Frodal BH, Hopperstad OS. Modelling ductile fracture in an Al alloy with crystal plasticity models. Materials Research Proceedings (MRP). 2024;41:2190-2199Metadata
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