Investigating the origin of cube texture during static recrystallization of fcc metals : A full field crystal plasticity-phase field study
Supriyo Chakraborty, Chaitali S. Patil, Yunzhi Wang, Stephen R., Niezgoda

TL;DR
This study combines crystal plasticity and phase field modeling to investigate the formation of cube texture in fcc metals during static recrystallization, revealing nucleation and growth mechanisms that influence texture evolution.
Contribution
It introduces a full field simulation approach integrating dislocation-based crystal plasticity and stochastic nucleation to elucidate cube texture origin in fcc metals.
Findings
Cube volume fraction decreases with strain during deformation.
Cube grains tend to rotate towards cube orientation and nucleate preferentially during recrystallization.
Heterogeneous nucleation distribution significantly affects grain size and texture evolution.
Abstract
The origin of cube recrystallization texture in medium to high stacking-fault energy fcc metals has been debated for almost 70 years. Despite numerous experimental and simulation studies, many issues regarding the nucleation and growth of cube grains remain unresolved. Here we apply a full field crystal plasticity model utilizing a dislocation density based constitutive theory to study the deformation and texture evolution in copper (Cu) under plane strain compression. Additionally, we use the phase field method, along with a stochastic nucleation model, for static recrystallization simulations. Simulation results show that the volume fraction of the cube component during deformation decreases with increasing strain. Although cube grains are not stable during plane strain compression, some of the non-cube grains rotate towards cube and develop narrow cube bands near the grain boundary…
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Taxonomy
TopicsMicrostructure and mechanical properties · Metallurgy and Material Forming · Aluminum Alloy Microstructure Properties
