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Prediction of dislocation - grain boundary interactions in FCC aluminum bicrystals using a modified continuum criterion and machine learning methods

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Authors

Gravell, Jamie D.; Cho, Jaehyun; Lee, Seungjoon; Aubry, Sylvie; Ryu, Ill

Issue Date
2023-09
Publisher
ELSEVIER SCI LTD
Citation
MATERIALIA, Vol.31
Abstract
Mechanical properties of metals such as strength and toughness are strongly correlated to complex interactions between various defects in the crystalline structure. While elementary interactions between these defects have been investigated using recent micro- and nano-characterization techniques, understanding of the detailed interaction mechanisms has hardly been obtained. To understand defect-driven plasticity at various time and length scales, it is necessary to formulate a general guideline to predict both the interaction type (transmission or reflection) and the dislocation's subsequent slip system after the interaction. Many criteria based on the geometric alignment of the defects have been developed to predict this phenomenon, but these have yet to be found to be accurate when applied to general data sets of grain boundaries (GBs). With this motivation, we conduct a systematic study using molecular dynamics (MD) models of bicrystals to analyze defect interaction process between a prismatic dislocation loop and eleven different grain boundaries of the following character: three tilt, three twist, and five mixed. Based on the MD observations, two new prediction methods are developed: the first is a new data-driven parametric score function based on the classical geometric criteria, and the second is by applying Gaussian process machine learning methods to find the probability distribution of a hidden function. The proposed data-driven prediction methods could pave a new way to predict the unit interaction of dislocations with various GBs, which could show much higher accuracy compared to pre-existing geometric criteria.
ISSN
2589-1529
URI
https://hdl.handle.net/10371/201255
DOI
https://doi.org/10.1016/j.mtla.2023.101874
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Ryu, Ill류일
조교수
  • College of Engineering
  • Department of Materials Science & Engineering
Research Area Fundamental deformation mechanisms, Optimal desing in nanostructures, Reliability Analysis in Nanostructures

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