In this paper, the effects of grain orientation on preferred abnormal grain growth in HCP-polycrystalline thin films have been analysed with respect to strain energy. The calculated results showed that C,a~, the average values of the orientation factor, decreased with increase of 1 for the same h an
Phase field modeling of grain growth in thin films on rigid substrates
β Scribed by Jie Deng
- Publisher
- John Wiley and Sons
- Year
- 2011
- Tongue
- English
- Weight
- 680 KB
- Volume
- 249
- Category
- Article
- ISSN
- 0370-1972
No coin nor oath required. For personal study only.
β¦ Synopsis
Abstract
A phase field model of grain growth in thin films on rigid substrates is presented, in which the motion of grain boundaries is driven by curvatures as well as anisotropy in surface, interface, and strain energies. The match between the proposed model and the corresponding sharp interface model is demonstrated by asymptotic analysis. The effect of diffuse interface on grain boundary mobility is minimized. The parameters in the model are connected to the measurable properties of materials, and therefore can be obtained from experiments or atomic scale simulations. In numerical simulations, the influence of the texture dependent surface, interface, and strain energies on grain growth is illustrated. The effects of film thickness, strain level, and grain boundary grooving on grain size distribution and texture evolution are also investigated. The effectiveness as well as the limits of the present model are discussed, and the ways to extend it are proposed.
π SIMILAR VOLUMES
## Abstract The timeβdependent irreversible deformation of a thin metal film constrained by a substrate is investigated by a mesoscopic discrete dislocation simulation scheme incorporating information from atomistic studies of dislocation nucleation mechanisms. The simulations take into account dis
## Growth laws are derived for coplanar spherical caps and discs of constant height which are coarsening via surface diffusion. The analysis includes the effects of anisotropic particle/ substrate interface energies. These results are also extended to analysis of normal and secondary grain growth