0
Article ? AI-assigned paper type based on the abstract. Classification may not be perfect — flag errors using the feedback button. Tier 2 ? Original research — experimental, observational, or case-control study. Direct primary evidence. Environmental Sources Policy & Risk Sign in to save

Investigation of microplastic deformation mechanisms in TA2 metallic bipolar plates using a crystal plasticity model coupling slip and twinning

Journal of Materials Research and Technology 2026 Score: 40 ? 0–100 AI score estimating relevance to the microplastics field. Papers below 30 are filtered from public browse.
Zhikuan Ran, Xue Li, Xue Li, Lu Han, Quhao Li, Jilai Wang, Wen Feng

Summary

This paper is not about environmental microplastics — it uses 'microplastic' in the materials science sense to describe tiny deformation zones within titanium metal sheets used for hydrogen fuel cell components, studying how these microscale plastic deformations affect metal forming during manufacturing.

Metallic bipolar plates (MBPS) serve as the core components of hydrogen fuel cells, tasked with transporting reactant gases, conducting electrical current, providing sealing structures, and other functions. Stamping is the primary method for fabricating micro channels in MBPS. However, severe thinning and even fracture of bipolar plates can occur during micro-stamping. Aiming to investigate the deformation mechanisms of MBPS in the process of microplastic forming,this work selected TA2 (a commercial purity titanium) plate with a thickness of 0.1 mm and initial α-phase textures to conduct room-temperature tensile and micro-stamping experiments. Numerical simulation analysis was carried out in the finite element framework based on the established full-field crystal plastic constitutive model coupling slip and twinning. Significant uneven distribution of stress and strain was observed in the plates during the plastic forming process. The results showed that the weakening of the hindering effect of grain boundaries on dislocation slip with increasing grain size was the main reason for the decrease in flow stress and tensile strength. The thinning behavior of the plate exhibits a distinct size effect, where an increase in grain size leads to a more pronounced manifestation of the plate thinning phenomenon. The anisotropy between grains increases the inhomogeneity of grain deformation in the surface layer, which leads to surface roughening after plate forming. Size effect and crystal anisotropy are all important factors affecting the quality of polar plate forming. The current work provides an experimentally and computationally based guide for achieving low-cost, high quality forming and fabrication of MBPS.

Sign in to start a discussion.

More Papers Like This

Article Tier 2

Hierarchy of the macrozone features in Ti-6Al-4V alloy inferred from massive polycrystal plasticity calculations

Researchers used advanced crystal plasticity computer modeling to study how clusters of similarly-oriented grains — called macrozones — affect stress concentrations and fatigue performance in titanium alloys used in aerospace applications. The term "microplastic" here refers to early-stage metal deformation behavior (not environmental plastic pollution); results showed macrozone texture and shape strongly influence where stress hotspots form under cyclic loading.

Article Tier 2

Slip Irreversibility, Microplasticity, and Fatigue Cracking Mechanism in Near-α and α + β Titanium Alloys

This paper is not about microplastics; it reviews the materials-science mechanisms of microplasticity, slip irreversibility, and fatigue crack initiation in near-α and α+β titanium alloys—a topic in metallurgy unrelated to plastic pollution.

Article Tier 2

In situ characterization of work hardening and springback in grade 2 α-titanium under tensile load

A study using X-ray diffraction and electron microscopy characterized work hardening and springback in titanium sheet metal. While unrelated to microplastics, research on mechanical behavior of metals is relevant to understanding how metal and polymer particles are generated during manufacturing and wear.

Article Tier 2

Effect of microvoids on microplasticity behavior of dual-phase titanium alloy under high cyclic loading (I): Crystal plasticity analysis

Researchers used crystal plasticity finite element modelling to investigate how microvoids influence microplasticity deformation in dual-phase titanium alloy under high cyclic loading. They found that geometrically necessary dislocations accumulate around microvoids, with void tip curvature having a greater effect on dislocation density than void size, and that increasing void size and curvature elevates cumulative shear strain across all phases.

Article Tier 2

Probing Microplasticity in Small-Scale FCC Crystals via Dynamic Mechanical Analysis

This study used dynamic mechanical analysis to study pre-yield dislocation activity — tiny structural movements — in small-scale face-centered cubic metal crystals. It is a materials science paper on nanoscale metal plasticity with no connection to environmental microplastics.

Share this paper