Dislocations 2019

A new method to investigate dislocation self-climb dominated by core diffusion

Fengxian Liu 1 Edmund Tarleton 1 A.C.F. Cocks 2
1Department of Materials, University of Oxford, Oxford
2Department of Engineering Science, University of Oxford, Oxford

The mobility of atoms in dislocation core regions is many orders of magnitude faster than in the surrounding lattice. This rapid atomic transport along dislocation cores plays a significant role in the kinetics of many material processes, including low-temperature creep and post-irradiation annealing. In the present work, a finite element based analysis of the dislocation core diffusion process is presented; based on the variational principle. A dislocation self-climb model is then developed by incorporating this finite element core diffusion formulation within the nodal based three-dimensional discrete dislocation dynamics framework. The behaviour of an isolated loop in bcc iron is briefly reviewed, and simulations are extended to include the loop coarsening processes of both parallel and non-parallel loops by self-climb plus glide mechanisms, in which the huge time scale separation between climb and glide is bridged by an adaptive time stepping scheme. Excellent agreements are obtained between the numerical simulation and experimental results, as well as the theoretical solution of rigid prismatic loops. The coarsening process of a population of loops is simulated to investigate the mechanisms of the accumulative interactions and large-scale-patterning in bcc materials.

Fengxian Liu
Fengxian Liu
university of oxford








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