• Title of article

    Indentation-based assessment of the dependence of geometrically necessary dislocations upon depth and strain rate in FCC materials

  • Author/Authors

    Haghshenas ، نويسنده , , M. and Klassen، نويسنده , , R.J.، نويسنده ,

  • Issue Information
    روزنامه با شماره پیاپی سال 2013
  • Pages
    8
  • From page
    223
  • To page
    230
  • Abstract
    In the present paper, an assessment is presented of the indentation depth and strain rate dependency of “geometrically necessary” dislocations. Pyramidal indentation tests were performed at various loading rates from 1 to 1000 mN/s on annealed samples of pure copper, 70/30 brass, and 5052 aluminum alloy to study the effect of indentation strain rate on the indentation depth dependence of the average indentation stress. The model of Nix and Gao was applied to calculate the density of statistically stored dislocations (SSDs) and geometrically necessary dislocations (GNDs) as a function of indentation depth. The GND density displayed the characteristic decrease with increasing h. The average indentation stress, σ i n d was observed to decrease with increasing h and, for any given h increase with increasing loading rate. This observed dependence of σ i n d upon ε ̇ i n d was analyzed for the data obtained from small indentation depths, up to 800 nm, to assess the operative mechanism of time-dependent deformation associated with the GNDs. It was observed that for the high and medium stacking fault energy (SFE) 5052 aluminum and pure copper, the thermal activation energy Δ G T h e r m a l of the deformation rate followed essentially the same dependence upon σ i n d regardless of ε ̇ i n d , however in the 70/30 brass test material, which possess a lower value of SFE, the Δ G T h e r m a l showed a dependence upon σ i n d that was highly strain rate dependent. In the case of the high SFE material, the apparent activation volume, V⁎ of the deformation process was found to decrease with increasing ρ G N D s in a way indicative of deformation occurring by a process that is listed by dislocation/dislocation interactions. Our data indicate that in fcc materials of low SFE (i.e. 70/30 brass) the deformation during nano/micro-indentation occurs by a more complex mechanism than simple time dependent dislocation glide limited by dislocation–obstacle interaction. The operative deformation mechanism most likely involves micro-twinning and geometrically necessary twins (GNTs).
  • Keywords
    Indentation , FCC , SSDs , GNDs , SFE
  • Journal title
    MATERIALS SCIENCE & ENGINEERING: A
  • Serial Year
    2013
  • Journal title
    MATERIALS SCIENCE & ENGINEERING: A
  • Record number

    2174254