# Alloy Design for Mechanical Properties: Conquering the Length Scales

**Authors:** Irene J. Beyerlein, Shuozhi Xu, Javier LLorca, Jaafar A. El-Awady,, Jaber R. Mianroodi, Bob Svendsen

arXiv: 1904.04569 · 2019-04-10

## TL;DR

This paper reviews recent advances in multiscale modeling techniques for predicting the mechanical properties of multiphase alloys, emphasizing the integration of various computational methods across length and time scales.

## Contribution

It highlights how combining diverse computational tools enhances understanding of alloy microstructure, composition, and deformation mechanisms affecting mechanical performance.

## Key findings

- Multiscale modeling elucidates alloy deformation mechanisms.
- Integration of computational methods improves property prediction.
- Understanding microstructure-property relationships advances alloy design.

## Abstract

Predicting the structural response of advanced multiphase alloys and understanding the underlying microscopic mechanisms that are responsible for it are two critically important roles modeling plays in alloy development. An alloys demonstration of superior properties, such as high strength, creep resistance, high ductility, and fracture toughness, is not sufficient to secure its use in widespread application. Still, a good model is needed, to take measurable alloy properties, such as microstructure and chemical composition, and forecast how the alloy will perform in specified mechanical deformation conditions, including temperature, time, and rate. In this bulletin, we highlight recent achievements by multiscale modeling in elucidating the coupled effects of alloying, microstructure, and the dynamics of mechanisms on the mechanical properties of polycrystalline alloys. Much of the understanding gained by these efforts relied on integration of computational tools that varied over many length and time scales, from first principles density functional theory, atomistic simulation methods, dislocation and defect theory, micromechanics, phase field modeling, single crystal plasticity, and polycrystalline plasticity.

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Source: https://tomesphere.com/paper/1904.04569