Inelastic strain recovery of magnesium alloys and a new elastic modulus model

Author(s):  
YU Hai Yan ◽  
WU Hangyu ◽  
Wang Lin
2021 ◽  
Vol 197 ◽  
pp. 113781
Author(s):  
Rohit Berlia ◽  
Paul Rasmussen ◽  
Shize Yang ◽  
Jagannathan Rajagopalan

Author(s):  
Lars N. Hansen ◽  
Emmanuel C. David ◽  
Nicolas Brantut ◽  
David Wallis

The mechanical behaviour of antigorite strongly influences the strength and deformation of the subduction interface. Although there is microstructural evidence elucidating the nature of brittle deformation at low pressures, there is often conflicting evidence regarding the potential for plastic deformation in the ductile regime at higher pressures. Here, we present a series of spherical nanoindentation experiments on aggregates of natural antigorite. These experiments effectively investigate the single-crystal mechanical behaviour because the volume of deformed material is significantly smaller than the grain size. Individual indents reveal elastic loading followed by yield and strain hardening. The magnitude of the yield stress is a function of crystal orientation, with lower values associated with indents parallel to the basal plane. Unloading paths reveal more strain recovery than expected for purely elastic unloading. The magnitude of inelastic strain recovery is highest for indents parallel to the basal plane. We also imposed indents with cyclical loading paths, and observed strain energy dissipation during unloading–loading cycles conducted up to a fixed maximum indentation load and depth. The magnitude of this dissipated strain energy was highest for indents parallel to the basal plane. Subsequent scanning electron microscopy revealed surface impressions accommodated by shear cracks and a general lack of dislocation-induced lattice misorientation. Based on these observations, we suggest that antigorite deformation at high pressures is dominated by sliding on shear cracks. We develop a microphysical model that is able to quantitatively explain Young’s modulus and dissipated strain energy data during cyclic loading experiments, based on either frictional or cohesive sliding of an array of cracks contained in the basal plane. This article is part of a discussion meeting issue ‘Serpentinite in the earth system’


Metals ◽  
2019 ◽  
Vol 9 (5) ◽  
pp. 511 ◽  
Author(s):  
Baara ◽  
Baharudin ◽  
Anuar ◽  
Ismail

Commercial finite element software that uses default hardening model simulation is not able to predict the final shape of sheet metal that changes its dimensions after removing the punch due to residual stress (strain recovery or springback). We aimed to develop a constitutive hardening model to more accurately simulate this final shape. The strain recovery or balancing of residual stress can be determined using the isotropic hardening of the original elastic modulus and the hardening combined with varying degrees of elastic modulus degradation and the size of the yield surfaces. The Chord model was modified with one-yield surfaces. The model was combined with nonlinear isotropic–kinematic hardening models and implemented in Abaqus user-defined material subroutine for constitutive model (UMAT). The Numisheet 2011 benchmark for springback prediction for DP780 high-strength steel sheet was selected to verify the new model, the Chord model, the Quasi Plastic-Elastic (QPE) model, and the default hardening model using Abaqus software. The simulation of U-draw bending from the Numisheet 2011 benchmark was useful for comparing the proposed model with experimental measurements. The results from the simulation of the model showed that the new model more accurately predicts springback than the other models.


2014 ◽  
Vol 891-892 ◽  
pp. 1314-1319 ◽  
Author(s):  
Michael M. Kirka ◽  
Sachin R. Shinde ◽  
Phillip W. Gravett ◽  
Richard W. Neu

Significantly reducing the minimum temperature while maintaining maximum temperature of thermomechanical fatigue (TMF) cycles can reduce the life even when mechanical strain ranges are similar. This applies to in-phase (IP) and out-of-phase (OP) TMF cycles. This reduction in life has generally been attributed to a combination of changes in microstructure arising from aging and increases in the cyclic inelastic strain promoted by increases in the elastic modulus as the minimum cycle temperature is reduced. TMF cycles under both IP and OP conditions were conducted with maximum cycle temperatures within the 750-950C range and with minimum cycle temperatures of either 100 or 500C. A reduction in minimum temperature was observed to promote a decrease in TMF life by as much as a factor of ten for all TMF experiments. The reduction in TMF life is primarily controlled by increases in the inelastic strain range associated with increases in the elastic modulus that arise when the minimum temperature is reduced.


2015 ◽  
Author(s):  
Aleksandr Lotkov ◽  
Victor Grishkov ◽  
Dorzhima Zhapova ◽  
Anatolii Baturin ◽  
Victor Timkin

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