A discrete dislocation dynamics study of precipitate bypass mechanisms in nickel-based superalloys
Sabyasachi Chatterjee, Yang Li, Giacomo Po

TL;DR
This study uses advanced discrete dislocation dynamics simulations to explore and identify various dislocation bypass mechanisms in nickel-based superalloys, including a newly proposed hybrid transition mechanism influenced by precipitate size, volume fraction, and lattice misfit.
Contribution
The paper introduces a novel method for computing generalized stacking fault forces in DDD simulations and demonstrates the operation of a hybrid bypass mechanism in superalloys.
Findings
Hybrid bypass mechanism operates as a transition between shearing and looping.
Lattice misfit increases bypass stress, especially in shearing and hybrid regimes.
High lattice misfit can pin dislocations, affecting bypass stress.
Abstract
Order strengthening in nickel-based superalloys is associated with the extra stress required for dislocations to bypass the precipitates distributed in the matrix. A rich variety of bypass mechanism has been identified, with various shearing and Orowan looping processes giving way to climb bypass as the operating conditions change from the low/intermediate temperatures and high stress regime, to the high temperature and low stress regime. When anti phase boundary (APB) shearing and Orowan looping mechanisms operate, the bypass mechanism changes from shearing to looping with increased particle size and within a broad coexistence size window. Another possibility, supported by indirect experimental evidence, is that a third "hybrid" transition mechanism may operate. In this paper we use discrete dislocation dynamics (DDD) simulations to study dislocation bypass…
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