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Elucidating the origin of electroplasticity in metallic materials

Cited 87 time in Web of Science Cited 105 time in Scopus
Authors

Kim, Moon-Jo; Yoon, Sangmoon; Park, Siwook; Jeong, Hye-Jin; Park, Ju-Won; Kim, Kuntae; Jo, Janghyun; Heo, Taehoon; Hong, Sung-Tae; Cho, Seung Hyun; Kwon, Young-Kyun; Choi, In Suk; Kim, Miyoung; Han, Heung Nam

Issue Date
2020-12
Publisher
Elsevier BV
Citation
Applied Materials Today, Vol.21, p. 100874
Abstract
Electroplastic phenomenon has been demonstrated by that the elongation increases remarkably during deformation under electric current without a significant elevation of temperature due to Joule heating. Since the 1960s, the electroplasticity has been actively investigated; however, an exact explanation of the mechanism has been lacking. In this study, the origin of electroplasticity in metallic materials is elucidated based on first principle calculation, finite element simulation and experimental approaches. First principle calculations on a system that includes a grain boundary, which is the general defect in polycrystalline metallic materials, show that a charge imbalance near defects weakens drastically atomic bonding under electric current. The electroplastic behavior could be well reproduced with a small-scale, microstructure-based finite element simulation, which incorporates an effective temperature near defects under electric current. The effective temperature under electric current reflects the weakening of atomic bonding due to charge imbalance. In addition, the weakening of atomic bonding was confirmed by measuring the elastic modulus under electric current, which is inherently related to the atomic bonding strength. It can be said that the mechanical properties under electric current ultimately depend on the existing defects in metallic materials. (C) 2020 The Authors. Published by Elsevier Ltd.
ISSN
2352-9407
URI
https://hdl.handle.net/10371/201938
DOI
https://doi.org/10.1016/j.apmt.2020.100874
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  • College of Engineering
  • Department of Materials Science & Engineering
Research Area High Temperature Alloys, High Strength , Nano Mechanics and Nano Structure Design for Ultra Strong Materials, Shape and Pattern Design for Engineering Materials

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