Modeling deformation at elevated temperatures using discrete dislocation dynamics (DDD) is a recent area of high interest. However, the literature dedicated to this subject fails to address the variations of DDD parameters with temperature. This study aims to investigate the effect of temperature on the yield strength of aluminum thin films in two-dimensional DDD simulations. To this end, the temperature dependence of DDD parameters has been studied using molecular dynamics, three-dimensional DDD simulations, and the existing experimental results. Based on these calculations, we observed 18% decrease in the yield strength when temperature was increased from 100 K to 600 K. Discrete dislocation dynamics (DDD) is a powerful tool that has been successfully applied to simulate plastic deformation in crystalline materials specially at the micron and submicron scales in various modeling problems. In this method, the material is modeled as a continuous medium containing dislocations as the main plastic carriers, where evolution of dislocations is tracked. In the formulation of the DDD approach, it is assumed that the motion of a dislocation of unit length is governed by:where v is the dislocation velocity, m * is the effective mass, B is the drag coefficient, and F(t) is the driving force arising from externally applied stresses, image stresses, self-stress, interactions with other defects, and the lattice friction (Peierls stress). In this method, long range interactions between dislocations are calculated through theory of elasticity; short range interactions are determined based on local rules.DDD is implemented either in two-or three-dimensional frameworks. Three-dimensional DDD (3d DDD) includes dislocations in realistic geometries and many dislocation phenomena such as junction formation and cross-slip. 2d simulations include only infinitely long edge dislocations.In 2d approach, Frank-Read (FR) sources are represented by points; when the resolved shear stress exceeds a prescribed nucleation stress during a period of time, called nucleation time, the *