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  4. Scaling relations for crack-tip plasticity
 
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2002
Journal Article
Title

Scaling relations for crack-tip plasticity

Abstract
The fracture toughness of semibrittle materials such as bcc transition metals or semiconductor crystals strongly depends on loading rate and temperature. If crack-tip pasticity is considered to be thermally activated, a strong correlation between these quantities is expected. An Arrthenius-like scaling relation between the loading rate and the brittle-to-ductile transition temperature has already been reported. In the present work, two-dimensional discrete dislocation dynamics simulations of crack-tip plasticity are employed to show that the different combinations of loading rates and termperatures which yield the same fracture toughness are indeed correlated by a scaling relation. This scaling relation is closely related to the law used to describe dislocation motion. A strong correlation between loading rate and temperature is found in the entiere temperature regime in which crack-tip plasticity is controlled by dislocation mobility. This shows the importance of dislocation mobility for fracture thoughness below the brittle-to-ductile transition and for the transition itself. The findings of our simulations are consistent with experimental data gathered on tungsten single crystals and suggest that non-screw dislocations are dominating crack-tip plasticity in the semibrittle regime of this material.
Author(s)
Hartmaier, A.
Gumbsch, P.
Journal
Philosophical magazine. A  
DOI
10.1080/0141861021000018160
Language
English
Fraunhofer-Institut für Werkstoffmechanik IWM  
Keyword(s)
  • fracture

  • dislocation activity

  • scoling relation

  • brittle-to-ductile transition

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