About this Abstract |
Meeting |
MS&T24: Materials Science & Technology
|
Symposium
|
Computational Materials for Qualification and Certification
|
Presentation Title |
Development of Computational Materials Workflows for Additively Manufactured Metallic Materials to Enable Accelerated Prediction of Fatigue Performance |
Author(s) |
George R. Weber, Saikumar Yeratapally, Peter Spaeth, Erik Frankforter, Joshua Pribe, Brodan Richter, Edward Glaessgen |
On-Site Speaker (Planned) |
George R. Weber |
Abstract Scope |
The maturation of computational materials approaches for fatigue performance prediction in a qualification and certification process is stifled by the ability to validate complex, microstructure-based simulations. Such a validation strategy bears immediate challenges including generating accurate virtual microstructures, efficiently solving physics-based mechanical simulations over relevant spatial and temporal scales, and acquiring high-fidelity calibration and validation data at the appropriate length scale. This presentation will overview these common challenges and present a case study to demonstrate a computational materials workflow for additively manufactured metallic materials. In this study, process-specific defects are characterized using segmented X-Ray micro-computed tomography measurements and overlaid on virtual microstructures. Accelerated crystal plasticity-based fatigue simulations are performed to demonstrate cyclic evolution and localization of mechanical fields in the vicinity of defects in response to their precise spatial configuration. An example of how this computational materials workflow may support next-generation qualification is discussed. |