Motion of a Dislocation Acted on by a Viscous Drag through an Array of Discrete Obstacles
- 1 December 1971
- journal article
- research article
- Published by AIP Publishing in Journal of Applied Physics
- Vol. 42 (13) , 5273-5279
- https://doi.org/10.1063/1.1659936
Abstract
A computer model was used to calculate the shape and average velocity v of a dislocation acted on by a viscous drag, and moving through a field of point obstacles. As a special case, the operation of a Frank‐Read source was computed also. At sufficiently low velocities (and stress levels), the behavior is governed entirely by the obstacle spacing and strength; conventional tensile testing probably falls in this regime. At sufficiently high velocities (and stress levels), the behavior is governed entirely by the viscous drag; shock deformation falls in this regime. In between lies a wide range in which the two effects superimpose, each contributing measurably to the flow stress. The strain rate sensitivity m = (∂lnv/∂lnσ)T, where σ is the stress, reflects this behavior. At low and high velocities, respectively, m characterizes the obstacles and the drag. But in between m is characteristic of neither, and in fact reflects the change in the contributions of the two strengthening mechanisms when the applied stress is changed.This publication has 6 references indexed in Scilit:
- Viscous Drag on Dislocations at High Strain Rates in CopperJournal of Applied Physics, 1969
- Stress dependences of dislocation velocitiesPhilosophical Magazine, 1969
- Viscous drag on dislocations in aluminum at high strain ratesActa Metallurgica, 1968
- Mobility of Edge Dislocations in the Basal-Slip System of ZincJournal of Applied Physics, 1967
- Dislocation movement through random arrays of obstaclesPhilosophical Magazine, 1966
- A statistical theory of flow stress and work-hardeningPhilosophical Magazine, 1966