Dec 3, 2024
1:30pm - 2:00pm
Hynes, Level 3, Room 310
Michael Falk1,Bin Xu1,Zhao Wu2,Jiayin Lu3,4,Michael Shields1,Chris H. Rycroft3,Franz Bamer2
Johns Hopkins University1,RWTH Aachen University2,University of Wisconsin–Madison3,Harvard University4
Michael Falk1,Bin Xu1,Zhao Wu2,Jiayin Lu3,4,Michael Shields1,Chris H. Rycroft3,Franz Bamer2
Johns Hopkins University1,RWTH Aachen University2,University of Wisconsin–Madison3,Harvard University4
To enable design of additively manufactured amorphous metal parts with desired mechanical properties, including strength and toughness, we are pursuing simulation-informed modeling as an integral component of a simultaneous design approach. Through the interrogation of an 3D atomistic representative volume element of a binary glass, we harvest simulation data that quantifies plastic constitutive response. The resulting data quantifies the stress drops characteristic of metallic glass mechanical response in terms of state variables related to the stress and the structural state of the glass. This data informs a stochastic finite state automata model that can reproduce aspects of the mechanical response and the associated evolution of the material’s structural state. This serves as a lower-scale constitutive model for a continuum model capable of achieving predictions of mechanical response on significantly larger length scales. Validation of the continuum model is undertaken in comparison with large scale atomistic simulations. This work is supported by NSF under Grant Nos. DMR-2323718/DMR-2323719/DMR-2323720.