SUBJECT: Ph.D. Proposal Presentation
   
BY: Yin Zhang
   
TIME: Friday, October 2, 2020, 12:00 p.m.
   
PLACE: https://bluejeans.com/368927138, N/A
   
TITLE: Mechanics of Heterogeneous Metallic Materials
   
COMMITTEE: Dr. Ting Zhu, Chair (ME)
Dr. David McDowell (ME)
Dr. Min Zhou (ME)
Dr. Olivier Pierron (ME)
Dr. Aaron Stebner (ME)
Dr. Morris Wang (UCLA)
 

SUMMARY

Overcoming the strength-ductility tradeoff is a widely pursued goal in the materials community. In recent years, design, fabrication, and optimization of heterogeneous microstructures have been extensively explored to achieve the exceptional combinations of strength and ductility. However, there is currently a critical lack of the mechanics understanding of heterogeneous microstructures. In general, structural heterogeneities generate mechanical heterogeneities that are manifested as spatially non-uniform back stresses and forward stresses. These long-range, directional internal stresses can result in enhanced yield strength, work hardening, and tensile ductility. To understand the effects of heterogeneous microstructures and associated internal stresses on mechanical properties, the proposed thesis research aims to develop novel constitutive and atomistic models for several emergent heterogeneous material systems, including additively manufactured metal alloys, gradient nanotwinned metals, nanocrystalline thin films, and nanodispersion-strengthened composites.
Overall, the proposed thesis research will provide a new framework to bridge the structural heterogeneities and mechanical heterogeneities in several emergent heterogeneous material systems through constitutive modeling and atomistic simulations. The thesis work will be closely coupled with novel material processing, characterization, and testing. The modeling and simulation results will provide quantitative predictions and mechanistic insights toward the design of heterogeneous metallic materials with improved combinations of strength and ductility.