2021
DOI: 10.48550/arxiv.2108.05166
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Crystal plasticity finite element simulation of lattice rotation and x-ray diffraction during laser shock-compression of Tantalum

Abstract: Wehrenberg et al [Nature 550 496 (2017)] used ultrafast in situ x-ray diffraction at the LCLS xray free-electron laser facility to measure large lattice rotations resulting from slip and deformation twinning in shock-compressed laser-driven [110] fibre textured tantalum polycrystal. We employ a crystal plasticity finite element method model, with slip kinetics based closely on the isotropic dislocation-based Livermore Multiscale Model [Barton et al., J. Appl. Phys. 109 (2011)], to analyse this experiment. We … Show more

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Cited by 5 publications
(14 citation statements)
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“…This account is supported by our simulations: we find that the direction of the (10 1) planes, which are initially parallel to the proposed rotation axis, is almost invariant, while the (101) planes originally aligned with the compression axis, whose orientation is controlled exclusively by these primary systems, are deflected by several degrees. That the primaries are largely responsible for the observed rotation is already well-established [14,16,19]; what our analysis suggests is that the crystal rotates about [10 1] not because there are no other active plasticity mechanisms, but because the rotations caused by any additional mechanisms (i.e., the secondaries) mutually cancel. Hence, these single-crystal simulations suggest it is the asymmetric activation of the primaries combined with the symmetric activation of the secondaries that leads to the texture evolution observed by Wehrenberg et.…”
Section: A [101] Tantalumsupporting
confidence: 66%
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“…This account is supported by our simulations: we find that the direction of the (10 1) planes, which are initially parallel to the proposed rotation axis, is almost invariant, while the (101) planes originally aligned with the compression axis, whose orientation is controlled exclusively by these primary systems, are deflected by several degrees. That the primaries are largely responsible for the observed rotation is already well-established [14,16,19]; what our analysis suggests is that the crystal rotates about [10 1] not because there are no other active plasticity mechanisms, but because the rotations caused by any additional mechanisms (i.e., the secondaries) mutually cancel. Hence, these single-crystal simulations suggest it is the asymmetric activation of the primaries combined with the symmetric activation of the secondaries that leads to the texture evolution observed by Wehrenberg et.…”
Section: A [101] Tantalumsupporting
confidence: 66%
“…al. [19]: the inherently larger length-scale at which the finite-element-method framework operates means polycrystals can be simulated at just a fraction of the cost required in MD, which, when combined with its having the most faithful constitutive model of high-pressure tantalum to date, makes the Avraam model uniquely placed to explore the interplay of plasticity and intergranular interactions during dynamic compression. A study of grain-grain effects could form the basis of future work.…”
Section: A [101] Tantalummentioning
confidence: 99%
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