An Experimentally Informed Continuum Grain Boundary Model
Syed Ansari, Amit Acharya, Alankar Alankar

TL;DR
This paper develops a continuum model for grain boundary evolution using experimental energy data, exploring how different energy density functions influence microstructure dynamics and metastability in a one-dimensional setting.
Contribution
It introduces a novel continuum grain boundary model based on experimental data, incorporating physically justified regularization and analyzing the effects of energy density shape on microstructure evolution.
Findings
Different energy density shapes lead to distinct microstructural evolutions.
Metastability of grain boundaries persists over extended periods.
The model captures grain reorientation dynamics in one dimension.
Abstract
A continuum grain boundary model is developed that uses experimentally measured grain boundary energy data as a function of misorientation to simulate idealized grain boundary evolution in a 1-D grain array. The model uses a continuum representation of the misorientation in terms of spatial gradients of the orientation as a fundamental field. The grain boundary energy density employed is non-convex in this orientation gradient, based on physical grounds. Simple gradient descent dynamics of the energy are utilized for idealized microstructure evolution, which requires higher-order regularization of the energy density for the model to be well-set; the regularization is physically justified. Microstructure evolution is presented using two plausible energy density functions, both defined from the same experimental data: a 'smooth' and a 'cusp' energy density. Results of grain boundary…
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Taxonomy
TopicsMicrostructure and mechanical properties · Nonlocal and gradient elasticity in micro/nano structures · Mechanical stress and fatigue analysis
