Revealing the size effect mechanism of reversible grain boundary migration in nanocrystalline coppers: Molecular dynamics simulations and a refined disconnection model
AP Hua and JH Zhao and J Zhang and PS Yu and N Wei and WL Guo, JOURNAL OF THE MECHANICS AND PHYSICS OF SOLIDS, 161, 104832 (2022).
DOI: 10.1016/j.jmps.2022.104832
Reversible grain boundary (GB) migration is of great significance for promoting cyclic deform ability and has been observed in nanocrystalline metals. However, GBs as dislocation sources generally emit more dislocations under deformation with increasing grain sizes. The size effect mechanism of reversible GB migration is thus crucial but remains unknown. We demonstrate that the reversibility of the representative Sigma 11(113) GB migration in copper (Cu) bicrystals under cyclic shear strongly depends on their grain sizes using molecular dynamics (MD) simulations. Atomic observation of the GB plane reveals the transition mechanism from the fully reversible disconnection-mediated GB migration to the disconnection pair grooving (DPG) induced irreversible structural damage with increasing grain size (d), where the disconnections at the groove are proved to be screw disconnections with Burgers vectors of 1/2233 (2) over bar using Burgers circuit and lattice analysis. A refined disconnection model considering grain size is developed to predict disconnection-mediated GB migration behavior and interpret the forming mechanism of DPG. When satisfying d > 1.6651Gb/pi tau (shear modulus G, Burgers vector b, and shear stress tau), the DPG mode is triggered, while the single disconnection sliding provokes the reversible GB migration when d <= 1.6651Gb/pi tau. This study holds implications for nanocrystalline metals towards endurable cyclic deformability by controllable grain sizes.
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