Phase-field modeling of ductile fracture across grain boundaries in polycrystals
Kim Louisa Auth, Jim Brouzoulis, Magnus Ekh

TL;DR
This paper extends a thermodynamic phase-field fracture model to polycrystals, incorporating a novel boundary condition that dynamically couples slip transmission resistance with damage, enabling realistic simulation of grain boundary fracture in ductile metals.
Contribution
It introduces a new micro-flexible boundary condition for gradient plasticity that couples slip resistance with damage, allowing for more accurate modeling of grain boundary effects in ductile fracture.
Findings
The new boundary condition transitions from micro-hard to micro-free during failure.
It can simulate crack initiation and propagation across grain boundaries.
The model captures void coalescence and 3D crack fronts in polycrystals.
Abstract
In this study, we address damage initiation and micro-crack formation in ductile failure of polycrystalline metals. We show how our recently published thermodynamic framework for ductile phase-field fracture of single crystals can be extended to polycyrstalline structures. A key feature of this framework is that is accounts for size effects by adopting gradient-enhanced (crystal) plasticity. Gradient-enhanced plasticity requires the definition of boundary conditions representing the plastic slip transmission resistance of the boundaries. In this work, we propose a novel type of micro-flexible boundary condition for gradient-plasticity, which couples the slip transmission resistance with the phase-field damage such that the resistance locally changes during the fracturing process. The formulation permits to maintain the effect of grain boundaries as obstacles for plastic slip during…
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Taxonomy
TopicsMetallurgy and Material Forming · Metal Forming Simulation Techniques · Microstructure and Mechanical Properties of Steels
