Tuesday, June 18 |
07:00 - 08:45 |
Breakfast ↓ Breakfast is served daily between 7 and 9am in the Vistas Dining Room, the top floor of the Sally Borden Building. (Vistas Dining Room) |
09:00 - 09:40 |
David Srolovitz: A Grain Boundary Migration Mechanism-Based Description of Microstructure Evolution ↓ Grain boundary (GB) migration occurs through the motion of discrete steps along the GB. Unlike at free surfaces, steps at internal interfaces in crystalline materials commonly also have dislocation character. These line defects, constrained to the interface, are disconnections; characterized by a combination of a step height and Burgers vector, dictated by (bi)crystallography. I will show both MD and experimental evidence for these defects and explore their basic features, as related to GB migration. I will then describe a continuum equation of motion and show applications of this based on front tracking and phase field methods. I will demonstrate how GB motion during microstructure evolution gives rise to grain rotation and how cyclic annealing or stressing can accelerate grain growth. (TCPL 201) |
09:40 - 10:10 |
Masashi Mizuno: Recent Study for Evolution of Grain Boundaries Including Dynamic Lattice Misorientations and Triple Junction Drag ↓ In the 1950s, one thought that the length of grain boundaries was the
main effect of the evolution of grain boundaries. Nowadays, in
material science, we seek the effect of the grain boundaries' length
and the lattice misorientations on the evolution. In this talk, I will
explain a new mathematical model of grain boundary motion, including
dynamic lattice misorientations and triple junction drag. Using the
energetic variational approach, we derive a system of geometric
differential equations to describe the motion of such grain
boundaries.
Disappearance events of grain boundaries, so-called critical events,
are the main difficulty in analyzing the model. To overcome this
difficulty, an empirical distribution of the relative length with a
given lattice misorientation and normal, called a grain boundary
character distribution(GBCD, for short), was considered. To understand
the relationship between the model and the previous study of GBCD, I
next explain a stochastic model of the evolution of grain boundaries.
This talk is based on the joint work with Yekaterina Epshteyn (The
University of Utah)and Chun Liu (Illinois Institute of Technology). (TCPL 201) |
10:10 - 10:30 |
Coffee Break (TCPL Foyer) |
10:30 - 11:00 |
Emanuel (Menachem) Lazar: Modeling the atomistic structure of grain boundaries in realistic systems ↓ Although grain boundaries are easy to define in a continuum setting – they are the common boundary shared by a pair of adjacent crystals - they are extremely challenging to precisely define, or even characterize, on the atomic scale. Decades of careful work have resulted in broad and deep understanding of the atomistic structure of grain boundaries. Conventional approaches, however, are often limited to special kinds of grain boundaries in special kinds of systems. In this talk I would like to tell you about a new statistical structural description of grain boundaries suitable for studying realistic systems such as those described by thermodynamic ensembles, including ones far from their “ground states”. This characterization is robust in the sense that it is primarily determined by macroscopic degrees of freedom, and is only minimally affected by thermal noise, differences in local density, the presence of defects, and other variations in microscopic degrees of freedom. (TCPL 201) |
11:00 - 11:30 |
Arkadz Kirshtein: A thermodynamically consistent phase-field-micromechanics model of solid-state sintering ↓ Sintering, a pivotal technology in additive manufacturing, transforms ceramic and metallic powders into solid objects. To achieve products with customized properties, a deep understanding of microstructure evolution during sintering is crucial. Our approach ensures thermodynamic consistency, deriving the driving force for particle motion from the system’s free energy. As a result, our proposed phase-field-micromechanics model guarantees microstructure evolution that minimizes the system’s energy. We rigorously validate this model against recent theoretical benchmarks. Subsequently, we employ it to simulate the microstructure evolution of polycrystalline powder particles, shedding light on the mechanisms governing crystallite growth. Additionally, we analyze how grain boundary structure and orientation impact sintering kinetics (TCPL 201) |
11:30 - 13:30 |
Lunch ↓ Lunch is served daily between 11:30am and 1:30pm in the Vistas Dining Room, the top floor of the Sally Borden Building. (Vistas Dining Room) |
13:30 - 14:10 |
Katayun Barmak: Grain structure, grain growth, and evolution of the grain boundary network in polycrystalline materials: Experimental Studies ↓ A grand challenge problem in engineering of polycrystals is to develop prescriptive process technologies capable of producing an arrangement of grains that provides for a desired set of materials properties. One method by which the grain structure is engineered is through grain growth or coarsening of a starting structure. During grain growth, an initially random grain boundary arrangement reaches a state that is strongly correlated to the interfacial energy density.
Grain growth can be considered as the evolution of a large metastable network, and can be modeled by a set of deterministic local evolution laws for the growth of individual grains combined with stochastic models to describe their interactions. However, despite tremendous progress in formulating models of grain growth, existing descriptions do not fully account for various grain growth mechanisms, detailed grain topologies, and the effects of different time scales on microstructural evolution. Thus, to develop a predictive and prescriptive theory, an investigation of a broad range of statistical measures of microstructure is needed and must be obtained using experiments, simulations, data analytics, and mathematical modeling. This talk will focus on experimental studies that use thin metallic films as the platform. Recent hardware and software advances have removed bottlenecks to large scale ex situ and in situ data acquisition via (1) automated grain boundary segmentation in micrographs, (2) low thermal mass microelectromechanical systems and (3) integrated hardware-software drift correction and data management solutions. These innovations render thin films a key integrated experimental platform for current and future grain growth studies. The experimental advances together with advances in data analytics, simulations and theory are expected to enable microstructure by design. (TCPL 201) |
14:10 - 14:40 |
Ashwin Shahani: The dynamics of strain-energy-driven grain growth ↓ An understanding of microstructural dynamics under non-isothermal conditions is crucial to materials design. During a so-called ‘cyclic heat treatment’ of shape memory alloys, dissolution of semi-coherent precipitates generates dislocations, thereby raising the stored strain energy within grains. In this work, we employ synchrotron high-energy x-ray diffraction microscopy (HEDM) to map in 3D and time the heterogeneous microstructure over three orders-in-magnitude of length-scale, including the precipitates, grains, and intra-granular dislocation densities. Correspondingly, we use phase field simulations to bridge the spatiotemporal gaps in the HEDM study and propose a mechanism of strain-energy-driven growth. The joint experiments and simulations reveal a significant diversity in grain shapes, sizes, and dislocation densities that are generated over the course of the non-isothermal anneal. Our data also reveal a new mode of grain growth, involving the macroscopic translation of grain centers over time. Broadly, our efforts highlight a complexity in the microstructural dynamics brought about by stored strain energy, not predicted by conventional theories nor metallographic analyses. (TCPL 201) |
14:40 - 15:00 |
Informal Discussion (TCPL 201) |
15:00 - 15:30 |
Coffee Break (TCPL Foyer) |
15:30 - 16:00 |
Yuliya Gorb: Recent Developments in Periodic Homogenization of Heterogeneous Composite Materials ↓ This talk reports on the recent findings about the rigorous periodic homogenization of four coupled PDE systems that model heterogeneous composite materials. Specifically, it focuses on the following models: (i) a suspension comprising magnetizable rigid particles in a non-conducting carrier viscous Newtonian fluid, (ii) strongly coupled magnetorheological fluid, (iii) nonlinear dielectric elastomer, and (iv) high-contrast dielectric elastomer. The effective or homogenized response for these composites, which involves PDEs whose coefficients depend on the composite's geometry, the periodicity of the original microstructure, and the coefficients characterizing the initial heterogeneous material, will be demonstrated. The corresponding cell problems, along with the key concepts for justification, will also be mentioned. Additionally, various aspects of the underlying PDEs, such as nonlinearity and high contrast, will be examined. (TCPL 201) |
16:00 - 16:30 |
Yury Grabovsky: Thermodynamically consistent constitutive laws for thermoelectric composites ↓ Thermoelectric effects are widely used in industry. Yet, in contrast
to other coupled field phenomena, such as thermoelasticity or
piezoelectricity, there seems to be some confusion about the proper form
of constitutive laws. In this talk I will describe thermodynamically
consistent constitutive laws that retain their form under homogenization.
In addition I will address the question of characterizing all subclasses of
constitutive laws retaining their form under homogenization. (TCPL 201) |
16:30 - 17:00 |
Amit Acharya: Finite Deformation Mesoscale Field Dislocation Mechanics ↓ We will describe a model of dislocation mechanics based (crystal)plasticity of unrestricted geometric and material nonlinearity that, when exercised on a sufficiently fine scale, can rigorously predict fields of arbitrary dislocation distributions in finite bodies of arbitrary anisotropy, and when exercised at larger scales of resolution adequate for meso/macro scale structural response, suitably adapting established macroscale phenomenology related to kinetics of plastic flow, makes predictions up to finite strains of size and rate-dependent mechanical behavior, texture, and mesoscale dislocation microstructure evolution in polycrystalline aggregates and single crystals. The phenomenology used to go to the mesoscale can be systematically improved as the need arises, as can the geometric fields involved along with their governing equations.
The framework will be demonstrated by results with a focus on effects not predictable within linear dislocation statics or dynamics, or geometrically linear or nonlinear phenomenological plasticity theories.
In particular, we will show calculations of static and dynamic finite deformation stress fields of individual dislocations, including their annihilation and the production of Mach cones in intersonic dislocation motion. At the mesoscale, we shall recover the dramatically different experimentally observed size effects in compression and shear inferred from micropillar experiments that all strain gradient plasticity models overestimate and fail to predict. Similarly, additively manufactured nanolaminates show kink banding for sufficiently small lamination widths, which is again a strict test for continuum dislocation dynamics and strain gradient plasticity models at finite strains. We will show the recovery of such predictions by our model.
The model raises significant and challenging mathematical questions. (TCPL 201) |
17:00 - 17:30 |
Informal Discussion (TCPL 201) |
17:30 - 19:30 |
Dinner ↓ A buffet dinner is served daily between 5:30pm and 7:30pm in Vistas Dining Room, top floor of the Sally Borden Building. (Vistas Dining Room) |