Multiscale modeling of dislocations: combining peridynamics with gradient elasticity

Ritter J, Zaiser M (2024)


Publication Type: Journal article

Publication year: 2024

Journal

Book Volume: 8

Article Number: 2

Issue: 1

DOI: 10.1186/s41313-024-00052-y

Abstract

Modeling dislocations is an inherently multiscale problem as one needs to simultaneously describe the high stress fields near the dislocation cores, which depend on atomistic length scales, and a surface boundary value problem which depends on boundary conditions on the sample scale. We present a novel approach which is based on a peridynamic dislocation model to deal with the surface boundary value problem. In this model, the singularity of the stress field at the dislocation core is regularized owing to the non-local nature of peridynamics. The effective core radius is defined by the peridynamic horizon which, for reasons of computational cost, must be chosen much larger than the lattice constant. This implies that dislocation stresses in the near-core region are seriously underestimated. By exploiting relationships between peridynamics and Mindlin-type gradient elasticity, we then show that gradient elasticity can be used to construct short-range corrections to the peridynamic stress field that yield a correct description of dislocation stresses from the atomic to the sample scale.

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How to cite

APA:

Ritter, J., & Zaiser, M. (2024). Multiscale modeling of dislocations: combining peridynamics with gradient elasticity. Journal of Materials Science: Materials Theory, 8. https://doi.org/10.1186/s41313-024-00052-y

MLA:

Ritter, Jonas, and Michael Zaiser. "Multiscale modeling of dislocations: combining peridynamics with gradient elasticity." Journal of Materials Science: Materials Theory 8 (2024).

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