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Crystal-level strain rate sensitivity and temperature sensitivity are investigated in Zircaloy-4 using combined of bending creep test, digital image correlation, electron backscatter detection and thermo-mechanical tensile tests with crystal plasticity modelling. Crystal rate-sensitive properties are extracted from room temperature microscale creep, and temperature sensitivity from thermal polycrystalline responses. Crystal plasticity results show that large microscale creep strain is observed near notch tip increased up to 50% due to cross-slip activation. Grain-level microscale SRS is highly heterogeneous, and its crystallographic sensitivity is dependent on plastic deformation rate and underlying grain-based dislocation slip activation. Pyramidal <c+a> slip and total dislocation pileups contribute to temperature-sensitive texture effect on yielding and strength hardening. A faithful reconstruction of polycrystal and accurate rate-sensitive single-crystal properties are the key to capture multi-scale SRSs.
The interactions between {delta}-hydrides and plastic slip in a commercial zirconium alloy, Zircaloy-4, under stress were studied using in situ secondary electron microscope (SEM) micropillar compression tests of single crystal samples and ex situ di
There is a long standing technological problem in which a stress dwell during cyclic loading at room temperature in Ti causes a significant fatigue life reduction. It is thought that localised time dependent plasticity in soft grains oriented for eas
Crystal plasticity is mediated through dislocations, which form knotted configurations in a complex energy landscape. Once they disentangle and move, they may also be impeded by permanent obstacles with finite energy barriers or frustrating long-rang
The critical dynamics of dislocation avalanches in plastic flow is examined using a phase field crystal (PFC) model. In the model, dislocations are naturally created, without any textit{ad hoc} creation rules, by applying a shearing force to the perf
The long-term safety of water-based nuclear reactors relies in part on the reliability of zirconium-based nuclear fuel. Yet the progressive ingress of hydrogen during service makes zirconium alloys subject to delayed hydride cracking. Here, we use a