Elasto-plastic evolution of single crystals driven by dislocation flow
Thomas Hudson, Filip Rindler

TL;DR
This paper develops a comprehensive model for large-strain elasto-plastic dynamics in single crystals driven solely by dislocation movement, integrating geometric, energetic, and thermodynamic principles.
Contribution
It introduces a novel geometric framework for dislocation-driven plasticity, linking microscopic dislocation motion to macroscopic plastic flow with first-principles energetics.
Findings
Recovers classical laws like Peach-Koehler force.
Shows dislocation movement determines plastic distortion curl.
Provides a foundation for incorporating effects like hardening and climb.
Abstract
This work introduces a model for large-strain, geometrically nonlinear elasto-plastic dynamics in single crystals. The key feature of our model is that the plastic dynamics are entirely driven by the movement of dislocations, that is, -dimensional topological defects in the crystal lattice. It is well known that glide motion of dislocations is the dominant microscopic mechanism for plastic deformation in many crystalline materials, most notably in metals. We propose a novel geometric language, built on the concepts of space-time "slip trajectories" and the "crystal scaffold" to describe the movement of (discrete) dislocations and to couple this movement to plastic flow. The energetics and dissipation relationships in our model are derived from first principles drawing on the theories of crystal modeling, elasticity, and thermodynamics. The resulting force balances involve a new…
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Taxonomy
TopicsMicrostructure and mechanical properties · Force Microscopy Techniques and Applications · Nonlocal and gradient elasticity in micro/nano structures
