Viscoplastic Constitutive Equations for Copper With Strain Rate History and Temperature Effects

1978 ◽  
Vol 100 (4) ◽  
pp. 388-394 ◽  
Author(s):  
S. R. Bodner ◽  
A. Merzer

Elastic-viscoplastic constitutive equations based on a single internal state variable which is a function of plastic work are used to calculate the response of copper to a six decade change of strain rate over a range of temperatures. Calculations were performed for the conditions of an experimental program on copper by Senseny, Duffy, and Hawley, namely, temperatures ranging from 77°K to 523°K and strain rate jumps from 2 × 10−4sec−1 to 3 × 102sec−1 at three strain levels. The computed results are in good agreement with the experiments and show similar strain rate and strain rate history effects. Relations are obtained for the temperature dependence of certain parameters in the equations which indicate correspondence between plastic working and temperature and between strain rate sensitivity and temperature.

Author(s):  
Y. B. Guo ◽  
Q. Wen ◽  
M. F. Horstemeyer

Worked materials in large deformation processes such as forming and machining experience a broad range of strain, strain rate, and temperatures, which in turn affect the flow stress. However, the flow stress also highly depends on many other factors such as strain path, strain rate and temperature history. Only a model that includes all of these pertinent factors is capable of predicting complex stress state in material deformation. In this paper, the commonly used phenomenological plasticity models (Johnson-Cook, Usui, etc.) to characterize material behavior in forming and machining were critically reviewed. Although these models are easy to apply and can describe the general response of material deformation, these models lack the mechanisms to reflect static and dynamic recovery and the effects of load path and strain rate history in large deformation processes. These effects are essential to understand process mechanisms, especially surface integrity of the manufactured products. As such a dislocation-based internal state variable (ISV) plasticity model was used, in which the evolution equations enable the prediction of strain rate history and temperature history effects. These effects can be quite large and cannot be modeled by the equation-of-state models that assume that stress is a unique function of the total strain, strain rate, and temperature, independent of the loading path. The temperature dependence of the hardening and recovery functions results in the prediction of thermal softening during adiabatic temperatures rises, which are common in metal forming and machining. The dynamic mechanical behaviors of three different benchmark work materials, titanium Ti-6Al-4V, AISI 52100 steel (62 HRc), and aluminum 6061-T6, were modeled using the ISV approach. The material constants were obtained by using a nonlinear regression fitting algorithm in which the stress-strain curves from the model were correlated to the experiments at different (extreme) temperatures. Then the capabilities of the determined material constants were examined by comparing the predicted material flow stress with the test data at different temperatures, strains, and strain rate history. The comparison demonstrates that the internal state plasticity model can successfully recover dynamic material behavior at various deformation states including the loading path effect. In addition, thermal softening due to adiabatic deformation was also captured by this approach.


2012 ◽  
Vol 189 ◽  
pp. 31-35 ◽  
Author(s):  
Yuan Ming Huo ◽  
Bao Yu Wang ◽  
Jian Guo Lin

The internal state variable method may be the best tool,offering researcher the model framework,certainly based on physical mechanism. A constitutive equation model framework,reported in this study, has been proposed to predict the distribution of stress of EA4T steel. The constants ,arising in this model ,are determined using an evolutionary programming (EP) optimization technique . A good agreement between the computational and experimental results was found.


1979 ◽  
Vol 101 (4) ◽  
pp. 305-310 ◽  
Author(s):  
K. J. Chang ◽  
R. Lance ◽  
S. Mukherjee

The inelastic response of a beam to several time-varying moments is presented in this paper. The constitutive equations used to describe the beam material are due to Hart. This is one of several state variable theories of inelastic deformation that have been proposed recently. Hart’s equations have been previously shown to accurately predict the response of uniaxial specimens to time-varying loads. It is seen from this paper that Hart’s theory is able to qualitatively simulate various phenomena in creep and plasticity such as the effect of previous deformation history, stress redistribution, yielding, strain recovery, material hardening and strain rate sensitivity in this case of bending of a beam. The computational scheme used to integrate the equations is very efficient.


1993 ◽  
Vol 115 (4) ◽  
pp. 358-364 ◽  
Author(s):  
V. S. Bhattachar ◽  
D. C. Stouffer

The unified constitutive equations for Rene´ 80 developed by Bhattachar and Stouffer (1992) are used to predict the thermomechanical fatigue (TMF) response of a Nickel base superalloy Rene´ 80 between 649°C and 1093°C. Predictions using these equations suggest that temperature history effects are significant during TMF, and that the TMF response of Rene´ 80 cannot be predicted completely using only isothermal parameters. It is postulated without metallurgical observations that the two deformation mechanisms in Rene´ 80, planar slip at low temperatures and dislocation climb at high temperatures, produce characteristic microstructures which interact under nonisothermal conditions to produce extra hardening that is not present during isothermal deformation. A state variable approach has been used to model this interaction. The nonisothermal model with temperature history effects could successfully predict the initial and saturated TMF response, and block isothermal response of Rene´ 80 from several tests between 649°C and 1093°C.


1992 ◽  
Vol 114 (4) ◽  
pp. 378-383 ◽  
Author(s):  
G. Ferron ◽  
H. Karmaoui Idrissi ◽  
A. Zeghloul

Constitutive equations based on a state variable modeling of the thermo-viscoplastic behavior of metals are discussed, and incorporated in an exact, long-wavelength analysis of the neck-growth process in uniaxial tension. The general formalism is specialized to the case of f.c.c. metals in the range of intragranular, diffusion controlled plastic flow. The model is shown to provide a consistent account of aluminum behavior both under constant strain-rate and creep. Calculated uniaxial tensile ductilities and rupture lives in creep are also compared with experiments.


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