Dislocations And Mechanical Properties - 3-1 Historical Sketch

The American Institute of Mining, Metallurgical, and Petroleum Engineers
E. Orowan
Organization:
The American Institute of Mining, Metallurgical, and Petroleum Engineers
Pages:
127
File Size:
5267 KB
Publication Date:
Jan 1, 1954

Abstract

LONG before the role of dislocations in the plastic deformation of crystals was recognized, the stress-strain field around dislocations received considerable attention in the theory of elasticity. It seems that Weingarten1 was the first to consider dislocations as simple and typical sources of internal stress in elastic solids, and Volterra2 and Timpe3 investigated their elastic field. Fig 3-1 shows the two basic types of dislocations considered by Volterra. The first arises by making a straight-edged .plane cut in a solid, displacing the two surfaces of the cut in their own plane relatively to one another by a constant amount in a direction perpendicular to the edge, and welding them together; this is shown in Fig 3-la, where the outer cylindrical surface represents the boundary of the solid, and the thin spiral cylinder around the edge of the cut has been removed in order to avoid infinities of stress and strain. The second type of dislocation is shown in Fig 3-lb; here the surfaces of the cut have been displaced relatively to one another by a constant amount parallel to the edge, and then welded together. After J. M. Burgers,4 these two types are called edge and screw dislocations, respectively. They represent simple limiting cases; in the general case, the surfaces of the cut are displaced by a constant vector that lies in the plane of the surface but has components both parallel and perpendicular to the edge of the cut. This vector is the Burgers or slip vector. The name “dislocation” was given by A. E. H. Love;5 it was bor-
Citation

APA: E. Orowan  (1954)  Dislocations And Mechanical Properties - 3-1 Historical Sketch

MLA: E. Orowan Dislocations And Mechanical Properties - 3-1 Historical Sketch. The American Institute of Mining, Metallurgical, and Petroleum Engineers, 1954.

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