Open Access
Machine Learning–Based Reduce Order Crystal Plasticity Modeling for ICME Applications
Author(s) -
Mengfei Yuan,
Sean Paradiso,
Bryce Meredig,
Stephen R. Niezgoda
Publication year - 2018
Publication title -
integrating materials and manufacturing innovation
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.878
H-Index - 22
eISSN - 2193-9772
pISSN - 2193-9764
DOI - 10.1007/s40192-018-0123-x
Subject(s) - viscoplasticity , texture (cosmology) , plasticity , materials science , crystallite , deformation (meteorology) , constitutive equation , crystal plasticity , artificial intelligence , stress (linguistics) , machine learning , computer science , composite material , structural engineering , finite element method , engineering , metallurgy , image (mathematics) , linguistics , philosophy
Crystal plasticity simulation is a widely used technique for studying the deformation processing of polycrystalline materials. However, inclusion of crystal plasticity simulation into design paradigms such as integrated computational materials engineering (ICME) is hindered by the computational cost of large-scale simulations. In this work, we present a machine learning (ML) framework using the material information platform, Open Citrination, to develop and calibrate a reduced order crystal plasticity model for face-centered cubic (FCC) polycrystalline materials, which can be both rapidly exercised and easily inverted. The reduced order model takes crystallographic texture, constitutive model parameters, and loading condition as inputs and returns the stress-strain curve and final texture. The model can also be inverted and take a stress-strain curve, loading condition, and final texture as inputs and return the initial texture and constitutive model parameters as outputs. Principal component analysis (PCA) is used to develop an efficient description of the crystallographic texture. A viscoplastic self-consistent (VPSC) crystal plasticity solver is used to create the training data by modeling the stress-strain behavior and evolution of texture during deformation processing.