1979
DOI: 10.1080/01418617908234871
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Annihilation of dislocations during tensile and cyclic deformation and limits of dislocation densities

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Cited by 739 publications
(282 citation statements)
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“…Considering that reported measured dislocation densities of nominally identical materials can sometimes differ by a factor 2 to 3, the level of correspondence shown in Figure 6 is considered consistent with the model. The present predicted averaged dislocation densities in grains are also broadly consistent with the predicted maximum dislocation densities for pure metals based on models incorporating the assessment of annihilation of individual dislocation of different character (screw and non-screw) [40].…”
Section: Verifying the Modelsupporting
confidence: 73%
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“…Considering that reported measured dislocation densities of nominally identical materials can sometimes differ by a factor 2 to 3, the level of correspondence shown in Figure 6 is considered consistent with the model. The present predicted averaged dislocation densities in grains are also broadly consistent with the predicted maximum dislocation densities for pure metals based on models incorporating the assessment of annihilation of individual dislocation of different character (screw and non-screw) [40].…”
Section: Verifying the Modelsupporting
confidence: 73%
“…We define L gen as the total cumulative dislocation linelength generated during the deformation processing. We consider that dislocation are either retained in the grains or subsumed in grain boundaries (existing or new ones) [19,37] or annihilated within the grain [40]. We will consider that the annihilation can be described through a temperature and material dependent annihilation fraction, f an , i.e.…”
Section: Dislocation Generation and Thermally Activated Dislocation Amentioning
confidence: 99%
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“…. , 12, which is the generalized form of the relation originally suggested by [34]. In this equation, the first term within the parentheses denotes the accumulation , where L ξ is the average dislocation segment length defined by…”
Section: Strain Gradient Crystal Plasticity Formulationmentioning
confidence: 99%