Prediction of crystallographic texture evolution and anisotropic stress–strain curves during large plastic strains in high purity α-titanium using a Taylor-type crystal plasticity model

2007 ◽  
Vol 55 (2) ◽  
pp. 423-432 ◽  
Author(s):  
X WU ◽  
S KALIDINDI ◽  
C NECKER ◽  
A SALEM
2011 ◽  
Vol 702-703 ◽  
pp. 204-207 ◽  
Author(s):  
Young Ung Jeong ◽  
Frédéric Barlat ◽  
Myoung Gyu Lee

The flow stress behavior of a bake-hardenable steel during a few simple shear cycles is investigated using a crystal plasticity model. The simple shear test provides a stable way to reverse the loading direction. Stress reversals were accompanied with a lower yield stress, i.e., the Bauschinger effect, followed by a transient hardening stage with a plateau region and, permanent softening. The origins of these three distinct stages are discussed using a crystal plasticity model. To this end, the representative discrete grain set is tuned to capture such behavior by coupling slip system hardening appropriately. The simulated results are compared with experimental forward-reverse simple shear stress-strain curves. It is shown that the characteristic flow stress stages are linked to texture evolution and to the Bauschinger effect acting on the different slip systems.


Author(s):  
Xianfeng Ma ◽  
Kan Ma ◽  
Yawen Wu

For a better use of titanium alloy in nuclear industry, development of integrated computational materials engineering (ICME) model is necessary to optimize alloy microstructure and thus the performance of titanium component. Within an ICME toolset, constitutive models play an important role in quantitatively capturing the interrelationship between processing, microstructure and property. In this paper, texture evolution during hot extrusion of near-alpha Ti6242S bar were studied with respect to the deformation and transformation texture component. Experimentally measured alpha and beta phase textures were instantiated in a three dimensional rate-dependent crystal plasticity model. The model is able to accurately predict the deformation textures of both the alpha and beta phases at extrusion temperature. While decomposition of the metastable beta phase occurred during the post-extrusion cooling, most of the transformation texture components formed aligned [0001] with the extrusion direction, which formed the primary component of extruded alpha texture. The transformation texture was predicted by numerically decomposing the simulated beta texture according to appropriate variant selection rule. Also demonstrated was the capability of a crystal plasticity model incorporating microstructure information, such as phase fraction and lamellar spacing. The crystal plasticity model was validated by comparing with the experimental elastoplasticity behaviors of Ti6242S bars with various microstructures.


2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
Artyom A. Tokarev ◽  
Anton Yu. Yants ◽  
Alexey I. Shveykin ◽  
Nikita S. Kondratiev

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