The societal need to conserve materials and energy calls for lighter and stronger metal components.
The advantage of metals is their unique combination of plasticity (i.e. formability) and strength, which is governed by their complex structure. This structure is organized hierarchically on several length scales. In contrast to functional materials and polymers, this complexity has led to the common theoretical framework being not physics, but an engineering science: metallurgy. As a result, phenomenological models prevail.
The big obstacle to understand the underlying physics is the lack of visualization of the dynamics of the structure. From 2012 to 2019 I have developed a hard X-ray microscope for high-resolution 3D studies. Uniquely, this now allows us to zoom into the material and map grains and dislocations. This will enable 3D movies on all relevant length scales. No competing group will have anything similar within the next 5 years.
PMP will exploit this to unravel the physics of plasticity. For the first time, we can directly see the processes involved: the creation of dislocations, their self-organization, and subsequent creation of ever more complex patterns. At the same time, we can deduce the local stress. This will provide answers to longstanding core questions of metal science.
Current multiscale models of plasticity are not capable of predicting realistic patterns. The new data will guide theory and allow for direct comparison of models and experiment at all scales. PMP will develop a physics-based multiscale model of plasticity that for the first time can predict which patterns evolve when and where in the metal, and as a result greatly improve predictions of the macroscopic plasticity and strength.
If successful, we have created the instrumental and modelling foundation for a new paradigm in structural materials. This will support the ultimate vision of materials and process design in computer models rather than trial and error in the lab.
Facts:
Funding provider: EU, ERC Advanced Grant
Title: The Physics of Metal Plasticity - PMP
Principal Investigator: Henning Friis Poulsen
PI's host institution: Department of Physics, Technical University of Denmark
Proposal duration: 60 months
The total grant is close to 2,5 EURO (2.496.794)
Duration: October 1, 2020 to September 30, 2025
Start date was postponed to October 1, 2020, due to recruitment challenges related to corona restrictions.
Collaborators:
Anter El-Azab at Purdue University: https://engineering.purdue.edu/MSE/people/ptProfile?resource_id=73835