

Type of Document Dissertation Author Saether, Erik URN etd-05202008-221010 Title A Multiscale Method for Simulating Fracture in Polycrystalline Metals Degree PhD Department Engineering Science and Mechanics Advisory Committee
Advisor Name Title Prof. Surot Thangjitham Committee Chair Dr. Edward H. Glaessgen Committee Member Prof. David Gao Committee Member Prof. John Duke Committee Member Prof. Norman Dowling Committee Member Prof. Richard Barnwell Committee Member Keywords
- Polycrystalline Metals
- Decohesion Finite Elements
- Cohesive Zone Models
- Molecular Dynamics
- Finite Element Method
- Multiscale Analysis
Date of Defense 2008-04-18 Availability unrestricted Abstract The emerging field of nanomechanics is providing a new focus in the study of the mechanics of materials, particularly in simulating fundamental atomic mechanisms involved in the initiation and evolution of damage. Simulating fundamental material processes using first principles in physics strongly motivates the formulation of computational multiscale methods to link macroscopic failure to the underlying atomic processes from which all material behavior originates.
A combined concurrent and sequential multiscale methodology is developed to analyze fracture mechanisms across length scales. Unique characterizations of grain boundary fracture mechanisms in an aluminum material system are performed at the atomic level using molecular dynamics simulation and are mapped into cohesive zone models for continuum modeling within a finite element framework. Fracture along grain boundaries typically exhibit a dependence of crack tip processes (i.e. void nucleation in brittle cleavage or dislocation emission in ductile blunting) on the direction of propagation due to slip plane orientation in adjacent grains. A new method of concurrently coupling molecular dynamics and finite element analysis frameworks is formulated to minimize the overall computational requirements in simulating atomistically large material regions. A sequential multiscale approach is advanced to model microscale polycrystal domains in which atomistically-based cohesive zone parameters are incorporated into special directional decohesion finite elements that automatically apply appropriate ductile or brittle cohesive properties depending on the direction of crack propagation. The developed multiscale analysis methodology is illustrated through a parametric study of grain boundary fracture in three-dimensional aluminum microstructures.
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