Discrete Dislocation Dynamics Modeling of Nanotwinned Materials: Orientation Effects in a Multilayer Twinned Structure of Copper
DeAn Wei, Michael Zaiser, Jing Tang, Xu Zhang

TL;DR
This study uses a 3D discrete dislocation dynamics model to explore how orientation affects deformation in nanotwinned copper with multilayer structures, revealing orientation-dependent stress responses and dislocation behaviors.
Contribution
It introduces a novel dislocation-twin boundary interaction model into DDD simulations to analyze orientation effects in multilayer nanotwinned copper structures.
Findings
Stress-strain response varies with loading orientation.
Dislocation behavior depends on the angle relative to twin boundaries.
Microstructure influences hardening and plastic flow stability.
Abstract
The impact of twin boundaries (TBs) on the microstructure evolution and plastic deformation mechanisms of face-centered cubic (FCC) metals has been extensively studied since the discovery that nanotwinned materials exhibit a favorable combination of high strength and ductility. In this work, a dislocation-twin boundary interaction model for copper is incorporated into a three-dimensional discrete dislocation dynamics (DDD) framework. This approach is applied to systematically investigate the orientation effects on the deformation of nanotwinned copper, utilizing a multilayer twinned structure (MTS) with a twin thickness of 160 nm. The simulation results show that the stress-strain response of MTSs under uniaxial loading depends significant on the orientation of the loading axis. Dislocations inclined to TBs are confined to slip in single- or multi-layer twin lamellae; when the loading…
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Taxonomy
TopicsMicrostructure and mechanical properties · Nonlocal and gradient elasticity in micro/nano structures · Copper Interconnects and Reliability
