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Probing the limits of metal plasticity with molecular dynamics simulations
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Probing the limits of metal plasticity with molecular dynamics simulations
Probing the limits of metal plasticity with molecular dynamics simulations
Journal Article

Probing the limits of metal plasticity with molecular dynamics simulations

2017
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Overview
The limits of dislocation-mediated metal plasticity are studied by using in situ computational microscopy to reduce the enormous amount of data from fully dynamic atomistic simulations into a manageable form. Probing plasticity limits of metals Fully dynamic atomistic simulations of plastic deformation in metals are so computationally demanding that materials physicists have instead developed mesoscale proxies to model dislocation dynamics. In this paper, Vasily Bulatov and colleagues take on the challenge of modelling metal plasticity at the atomic level. Such simulations require models that contain many millions of atoms (the largest simulation in this study contains 268 million atoms), and algorithms are used to process the datasets down to a volume that allows human interpretation. The authors probe ultrahigh-strain-rate deformation in body-centred-cubic tantalum, a model metal, to investigate the limits of metal plasticity. They show that at certain limiting conditions, dislocations can no longer relieve metal loading and twinning takes over. At a strain rate lower than this limit, flow stress and dislocation density achieve a steady state and a sort of metal kneading is observed. The simulations support previous proposals of the maximum dislocation density that can be reached before a metal collapses. Ordinarily, the strength and plasticity properties of a metal are defined by dislocations—line defects in the crystal lattice whose motion results in material slippage along lattice planes 1 . Dislocation dynamics models are usually used as mesoscale proxies for true atomistic dynamics, which are computationally expensive to perform routinely 2 . However, atomistic simulations accurately capture every possible mechanism of material response, resolving every “jiggle and wiggle” 3 of atomic motion, whereas dislocation dynamics models do not. Here we present fully dynamic atomistic simulations of bulk single-crystal plasticity in the body-centred-cubic metal tantalum. Our goal is to quantify the conditions under which the limits of dislocation-mediated plasticity are reached and to understand what happens to the metal beyond any such limit. In our simulations, the metal is compressed at ultrahigh strain rates along its [001] crystal axis under conditions of constant pressure, temperature and strain rate. To address the complexity of crystal plasticity processes on the length scales (85–340 nm) and timescales (1 ns–1μs) that we examine, we use recently developed methods of in situ computational microscopy 4 , 5 to recast the enormous amount of transient trajectory data generated in our simulations into a form that can be analysed by a human. Our simulations predict that, on reaching certain limiting conditions of strain, dislocations alone can no longer relieve mechanical loads; instead, another mechanism, known as deformation twinning (the sudden re-orientation of the crystal lattice 6 ), takes over as the dominant mode of dynamic response. Below this limit, the metal assumes a strain-path-independent steady state of plastic flow in which the flow stress and the dislocation density remain constant as long as the conditions of straining thereafter remain unchanged. In this distinct state, tantalum flows like a viscous fluid while retaining its crystal lattice and remaining a strong and stiff metal.