Multiscale modeling of the effective viscoplastic behavior of Mg 2 SiO 4 wadsleyite: bridging atomic and polycrystal scales

[PHYS.MECA.SOLID] Physics [physics]/Mechanics [physics]/Solid mechanics [physics.class-ph] Condensed Matter - Materials Science Polycrystal Sciences de l'ingénieur: Matériaux 550 Dislocations Materials Science (cond-mat.mtrl-sci) FOS: Physical sciences Earth mantle;Multiscale modelling;Dislocations;Polycrystal;Viscoplasticity Viscoplasticity Earth mantle 01 natural sciences 620 Geophysics (physics.geo-ph) Physics - Geophysics Multiscale modelling [PHYS.MECA.SOLID]Physics [physics]/Mechanics [physics]/Solid mechanics [physics.class-ph] multiscale modelling viscoplasticity polycrystal dislocations 0105 earth and related environmental sciences
DOI: 10.5802/crmeca.61 Publication Date: 2021-01-13T11:14:37Z
ABSTRACT
The viscoplastic behavior of polycrystalline Mg$_2$SiO$_4$ wadsleyite aggregates, a major high pressure phase of the mantle transition zone of the Earth (depth range: 410 -- 520 km), is obtained by properly bridging several scale transition models. At the very fine nanometric scale corresponding to the disloca-tion core structure, the behavior of thermally activated plastic slip is modeled for strain-rates relevant for laboratory experimental conditions, at high pressure and for a wide range of temperatures, based on the Peierls-Nabarro-Galerkin model. Corresponding single slip reference resolved shear stresses and associated constitutive equations are deduced from Orowan's equation in order to describe the average viscoplastic behavior at the grain scale, for the easiest slip systems. These data have been implemented in two grain-polycrystal scale transition models, a mean-field one (the recent Fully-Optimized Second-Order Viscoplastic Self-Consistent scheme of [44]) allowing rapid evaluation of the effective viscosity of polycrystalline aggregates , and a full-field (FFT based [45] [33]) method allowing investigating stress and strain-rate localization in typical microstructures and heterogeneous activation of slip systems within grains. Calculations have been performed at pressure and temperatures relevant for in-situ conditions. Results are in very good agreement with available mechanical tests conducted at strain-rates typical for laboratory experiments.<br/>Comptes Rendus M\'ecanique, Elsevier Masson, In press<br/>
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