A general thermodynamically consistent phase-field-micromechanics model of sintering with coupled diffusion and grain motion
Qingcheng Yang, Arkadz Kirshtein

TL;DR
This paper introduces a thermodynamically consistent phase-field-micromechanics model for sintering that accurately captures microstructure evolution, including grain motion driven by free energy, ensuring physically realistic simulation of densification processes.
Contribution
The work develops a unified energy law-based model that derives grain motion forces from free energy, improving thermodynamic consistency in sintering simulations.
Findings
Captures stress distribution along grain boundaries
Shows system-size-independent shrinkage strain
Maintains thermodynamic equilibrium states
Abstract
Sintering is a pivotal technology for processing ceramic and metallic powders into solid objects. A profound understanding of microstructure evolution during sintering is essential for manufacturing products with tailored properties. While various phase-field models have been proposed to simulate microstructure evolution in solid-state sintering, correctly incorporating the crucial densification mechanism, particularly grain motion, remains a challenge. The fundamental obstacle lies in the ad hoc treatment of the micromechanics of grain motion, where the thermodynamical driving force cannot be derived from the system's free energy. This work presents a novel phase-field-micromechanics model for sintering (PFMMS) that addresses this challenge. We define a unified energy law, under which the governing equations for microstructure evolution in sintering are derived using variational…
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Taxonomy
TopicsMetallurgy and Material Forming · Powder Metallurgy Techniques and Materials · Aluminum Alloys Composites Properties
