Correct description of the material behaviour is an extra challenge in
simulation of the materials processing and manufacturing processes such as
metal forming. Material models must account for varying strain, strain rate
and temperature, and changing microstructure. This study is devoted to the
physically based models of metal plasticity - dislocation density models,
their numerical implementation and parameter identification.
The basic concepts of dislocation density modelling are introduced including
the effects of static and dynamic recovery, influence of strain path and
modelling of the back-stress. Possible mechanisms controlling athermal and
thermally activated processes involving dislocations, vacancies and solute
atoms are also discussed.
Mobile and immobile dislocation densities, vacancy concentrations and other
variables are treated as internal state variables. The dislocation models
are incorporated in a classical continuum plasticity or viscoplasticity
framework by means of the evolution equations for these internal variables
which effectively control the hardening behaviour.
Implementation of these models into finite element codes is straightforward
and numerically efficient. Dislocation models are implemented in user
material subroutines and used in simulations of sheet metal forming and
extrusion. The models are also implemented in a custom toolbox for parameter
optimisation in Matlab. A special extended version of a return-map stress
update algorithm and its consistent tangent are derived to accommodate the
complex coupling effects in a material model, in which all thermo-elastic
and hardening properties may depend on the plastic strain.
Numerical difficulties of parameter optimisation such as non-uniqueness of
the solution, high sensitivity to the starting guess-value and to the choice
of the error function appear to be a common problem with advanced material
models. Simultaneous curve-fitting of multiple experimental curves of
different mechanical testing types is advised to achieve more robust
optimisation results. Parameters of dislocation density models usually have
clear physical interpretation, and it is possible to obtain values of some
of them from sources other than mechanical testing.
The accuracy of physically based models is totally dependent on finding the
adequate equations to describe the physical processes dominating the
material behaviour during deformation. These equations may be more or less
accurate than standard engineering models or data interpolation approaches.
However, the use of physically significant parameters related to the
microstructure properties such as grain size etc gives a natural way to
couple them to the models for microstructure evolution, which is important
in simulations of manufacturing processes.