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Journal ArticleDOI

Indentation size effects in crystalline materials: A law for strain gradient plasticity

William D. Nix, +1 more
- 01 Mar 1998 - 
- Vol. 46, Iss: 3, pp 411-425
TLDR
In this article, the indentation size effect for crystalline materials can be accurately modeled using the concept of geometrically necessary dislocations, which leads to the following characteristic form for the depth dependence of the hardness: H H 0 1+ h ∗ h where H is the hardness for a given depth of indentation, h, H 0 is a characteristic length that depends on the shape of the indenter, the shear modulus and H 0.
Abstract
We show that the indentation size effect for crystalline materials can be accurately modeled using the concept of geometrically necessary dislocations. The model leads to the following characteristic form for the depth dependence of the hardness: H H 0 1+ h ∗ h where H is the hardness for a given depth of indentation, h, H0 is the hardness in the limit of infinite depth and h ∗ is a characteristic length that depends on the shape of the indenter, the shear modulus and H0. Indentation experiments on annealed (111) copper single crystals and cold worked polycrystalline copper show that this relation is well-obeyed. We also show that this relation describes the indentation size effect observed for single crystals of silver. We use this model to derive the following law for strain gradient plasticity: ( σ σ 0 ) 2 = 1 + l χ , where σ is the effective flow stress in the presence of a gradient, σ0 is the flow stress in the absence of a gradient, χ is the effective strain gradient and l a characteristic material length scale, which is, in turn, related to the flow stress of the material in the absence of a strain gradient, l ≈ b( μ σ 0 ) 2 . For materials characterized by the power law σ 0 = σ ref e 1 n , the above law can be recast in a form with a strain-independent material length scale l. ( builtσ σ ref ) 2 = e 2 n + l χ l = b( μ σ ref ) 2 = l ( σ 0 σ ref ) 2 . This law resembles the phenomenological law developed by Fleck and Hutchinson, with their phenomenological length scale interpreted in terms of measurable material parametersbl].

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Citations
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Journal ArticleDOI

A TEM investigation on indentation plastic zones in Ni3Al(Cr,B) single crystals

TL;DR: In this paper, a core with a very high dislocation density and a surrounding region with a much lower density were found to consist of two regions, namely, a core core with high dislocations density and the surrounding region where the dislocated density is much lower.
Journal ArticleDOI

Effects of surface tension on axisymmetric Hertzian contact problem

TL;DR: In this article, the axisymmetric contact between a rigid sphere and an elastic half space was investigated and it was found that when the contact radius is comparable with the ratio of surface tension to elastic modulus, surface tension significantly affects the pressure distribution on the contact region.
Journal ArticleDOI

Buckling analysis of functionally graded rectangular nano-plate based on nonlocal exponential shear deformation theory

TL;DR: In this paper, the buckling response of functionally graded nano-plate based on exponential shear deformation theory is presented, which is built upon the classical plate theory, an exponential functions are used in terms of thickness co-ordinate to include the effect of transverse deformation and rotary inertia.
Journal ArticleDOI

Mechanism-based strain gradient crystal plasticity—II. Analysis

TL;DR: In this paper, a theory of mechanism-based strain gradient crystal plasticity (MSG-CP) was proposed to model the effect of inherent anisotropy of a crystal lattice on size-dependent non-uniform plastic deformation at micron and submicron length scales.
References
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Journal ArticleDOI

The deformation of plastically non-homogeneous materials

TL;DR: The geometrically necessary dislocations as discussed by the authors were introduced to distinguish them from the statistically storages in pure crystals during straining and are responsible for the normal 3-stage hardening.
Journal ArticleDOI

Strain gradient plasticity: Theory and experiment

TL;DR: In this paper, a deformation theory of plasticity is introduced to represent in a phenomenological manner the relative roles of strain hardening and strain gradient hardening, which is a non-linear generalization of Cosserat couple stress theory.
Journal ArticleDOI

A phenomenological theory for strain gradient effects in plasticity

TL;DR: In this paper, a strain gradient theory of plasticity is introduced, based on the notion of statistically stored and geometrically necessary dislocations, which fits within the general framework of couple stress theory and involves a single material length scale l.
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