Artículo de revista
Theory of ductility: From brittle to superplastic behavior of polycrystals
Fecha
2006Registro en:
Physical Review B - Condensed Matter and Materials Physics, Volumen 73, Issue 22, 2018,
10980121
1550235X
10.1103/PhysRevB.73.224107
Autor
Lagos, Miguel
Institución
Resumen
The plastic flow of a polycrystal is calculated assuming that no sliding does occur if the in-plane components of the shear stress acting on the common grain boundary of two grains are below a threshold stress τc. Otherwise the grains slide with relative velocity proportional to the in-plane shear stress. The trace of the resulting strain rate tensor does not vanish for finite threshold stress, indicating that the grains of the material are increasingly compressed as the sample is being stretched. The internal pressure helps deformation, and under some precise physical circumstances the material becomes mechanically unstable. The effect is very sensitive to the material constants and can explain extreme brittleness or large ductility. The approach can be extended to amorphous materials. © 2006 The American Physical Society.