Triple junction drag effects during topological changes in the evolution of polycrystalline microstructures
read the original abstract
Experiments, theory and atomistic simulations show that finite triple junction mobility results in non-equilibrium triple junction angles in evolving polycrystalline systems. These angles have been predicted and verified for cases where grain boundary migration is steady-state. Yet, steady-state never occurs during the evolution of polycrystalline microstructures as a result of changing grain size and topological events (e.g., grain face/edge switching - "$T_1$" process, or grain disappearance "$T_2$" or "$T_3$" processes). We examine the non-steady evolution of the triple junction angle in the vicinity of topological events and show that large deviations from equilibrium and/or steady-state angles occur. We analyze the characteristic relaxation time of triple junction angles $\tau$ by consideration of a pair of topological events, beginning from steady-state migration. Using numerical results and theoretical analysis we predict how the triple junction angle varies with time and how $\tau$ varies with triple junction mobility. We argue that it is precisely those cases where grain boundaries are moving quickly (e.g., topological process in nanocrystalline materials), that the classical steady-state prediction of the finite triple junction mobility triple junction angle is inapplicable and may only be applied qualitatively.
This paper has not been read by Pith yet.
discussion (0)
Sign in with ORCID, Apple, or X to comment. Anyone can read and Pith papers without signing in.