Temperature-Dependent Tension Plastic Deformation and Fracture Behavior of Ti-6.6Al-3.3Mo-1.8Zr-0.29Si Alloy at High Strain Rates

2014 ◽  
Vol 626 ◽  
pp. 115-120
Author(s):  
Jun Zhang ◽  
Qi Wei Zhang ◽  
Yang Wang

Titanium alloys have received great interest in the engineering applications requiring light weight and high impact resistance components. It is necessary to understand the mechanical properties of titanium alloys at high strain rates and various temperatures in the structural design. In the present paper, uniaxial tension tests at strain rates of 190, 500 and 1150s-1 and temperatures of 20, 150, 300°C are carried out using a modified split hopkinson tension bar system to investigate the effects of strain rate and temperature on tension behavior of the Ti-6.6Al-3.3Mo-1.8Zr-0.29Si alloy. Experimental results indicate that the alloy has the rate and temperature sensitivity and still keeps high strengths and toughness at temperature up to 300°C under high strain rate. SEM observations reveal that ductile fracture is the major fracture mode when the alloy is deformed at high strain rates.

2016 ◽  
Vol 36 (2) ◽  
pp. 165-171 ◽  
Author(s):  
Georges Challita ◽  
Ramzi Othman ◽  
Khaled Khalil

Abstract This paper deals with the experimental characterization of a bulk adhesive fracture in the quasi-static range using a conventional machine and at high strain rates using the Hopkinson bar technique. For very high strain rates, the direct impact Hopkinson bar technique is used. The studied adhesive is a toughened epoxy which can be used for impact resistance in bonded assemblies. It is worth studying the adhesive sensitivity to strain rate as a bulk material in order to distinguish between its response within a structure when used to bond substrates and its response as pure material. Experiments were carried out under compression and shear loadings. A special grip was conceived to mount the specimen for shear tests. In both loading types, this adhesive was found to be highly strain-rate-sensitive. The adhesive strength increases with strain rate until reaching a maximum value then it drops for very high strain rates. Although this behavior is uncommon, it has been reported already in three previous works.


1972 ◽  
Vol 14 (3) ◽  
pp. 161-167 ◽  
Author(s):  
T. Muller

An investigation into the mechanical behaviour of iron and nickel at high strain rates is carried out, using a split Hopkinson bar method. Some special adaptations, a correction method for the effects arising from the adiabatic conditions of dynamic deformation and a simplified data processing procedure are described in detail. The test conditions covered a range of strain rates between 500 and about 10 000/s and temperatures from 20 to 500°C. For both metals, the results are presented by means of a family of true stress-true strain curves. The strong strain rate sensitivity at high strain rates indicates that the rate controlling mechanism differs from that operative at ‘static’ strain rates.


2015 ◽  
Vol 816 ◽  
pp. 795-803
Author(s):  
Yan Ling Wang ◽  
Song Xiao Hui ◽  
Wen Jun Ye ◽  
Rui Liu

The mechanical properties and fracture failure behavior of the near β-type Ti-5Al-5Mo-5V-3Cr-X (X = 1Fe or 1Zr) titanium alloys were studied by Split Hopkinson Pressure Bar (SHPB) experiment under the dynamic loading conditions at a strain rate of 1.5 × 103 s-1–5.0 × 103 s-1. Results showed that the SHPB specimen fractured in the direction of maximum shearing stress at an angle of 45° with the compression axis. The fracture surface revealed the shear and tension zones with cleavage steps and parabolic dimples. Severe early unloading was observed on the Ti-5553 alloy under a strain rate of 4,900 s-1 loading condition, and the dynamic property of the Ti-55531Zr alloy was proved to be the optimal.


2019 ◽  
Vol 812 ◽  
pp. 38-44
Author(s):  
Shuai Chen ◽  
Wen Bin Li ◽  
Xiao Ming Wang ◽  
Wen Jin Yao

This work compares the pure copper (T2 copper)’s stress-strain relationship at different strain rates in the uni-axial tension test and Split Hopkinson Pressure Bar (SHPB) test. Small samples were utilized in the high strain rate SHPB test in which the accuracy was modified by numerical simulation. The experimental results showed that the T2 copper’s yield strength at high strain rates largely outweighed the quasi static yield strength. The flow stress in the stress-strain curves at different strain rates appeared to be divergent and increased with the increase in strain rates, showing great strain strengthening and strain rate hardening effects. Metallographic observation showed that the microstructure of T2 copper changed from equiaxed grains to twins and the interaction between the dislocation slip zone grain boundary and twins promoted the super plasticity distortion in T2 copper.


2011 ◽  
Vol 45 (24) ◽  
pp. 2495-2506 ◽  
Author(s):  
Pibo Ma ◽  
Hong Hu ◽  
Lvtao Zhu ◽  
Baozhong Sun ◽  
Bohong Gu

This article reports the tensile behaviors of a novel kind of 3D textile composite, named as co-woven-knitted fabric (CWKF) reinforced composite, under quasi-static and high strain rates. The tensile tests were conducted along the warp direction (0°), bias direction (45°), and weft direction (90°) at quasi-static strain rate of 0.001/s and high strain rates ranging from 1589/s to 2586/s. The results indicate that the tensile strength, failure strain, tensile stiffness, energy absorption, and resilient energy are strain rate sensitive along all the three directions. The relationships between the mechanical parameters and the strain rate were also analyzed. The fractograph of the CWKF composite demonstrate that the tensile failure modes are matrix shear failure and fibers breakage under the quasi-static testing condition while interface failure and fibers pullout are at high strain rates.


Author(s):  
Adewale Olasumboye ◽  
Gbadebo Owolabi ◽  
Olufemi Koya ◽  
Horace Whitworth ◽  
Nadir Yilmaz

Abstract This study investigates the dynamic response of AA2519 aluminum alloy in T6 temper condition during plastic deformation at high strain rates. The aim was to determine how the T6 temper condition affects the flow stress response, strength properties and microstructural morphologies of the alloy when impacted under compression at high strain rates. The specimens (with aspect ratio, L/D = 0.8) of the as-cast alloy used were received in the T8 temper condition and further heat-treated to the T6 temper condition based on the standard ASTM temper designation procedures. Split-Hopkinson pressure bar experiment was used to generate true stress-strain data for the alloy in the range of 1000–3500 /s strain rates while high-speed cameras were used to monitor the test compliance with strain-rate constancy measures. The microstructures of the as received and deformed specimens were assessed and compared for possible disparities in their initial microstructures and post-deformation changes, respectively, using optical microscopy. Results showed no clear evidence of strain-rate dependency in the dynamic yield strength behavior of T6-temper designated alloy while exhibiting a negative trend in its flow stress response. On the contrary, AA2519-T8 showed marginal but positive response in both yield strength and flow behavior for the range of strain rates tested. Post-deformation photomicrographs show clear disparities in the alloys’ initial microstructures in terms of the second-phase particle size differences, population density and, distribution; and in the morphological changes which occurred in the microstructures of the different materials during large plastic deformation. AA2519-T6 showed a higher susceptibility to adiabatic shear localization than AA2519-T8, with deformed and bifurcating transformed band occurring at 3000 /s followed by failure at 3500 /s.


2018 ◽  
Vol 183 ◽  
pp. 02042
Author(s):  
Lloyd Fletcher ◽  
Fabrice Pierron

Testing ceramics at high strain rates presents many experimental diffsiculties due to the brittle nature of the material being tested. When using a split Hopkinson pressure bar (SHPB) for high strain rate testing, adequate time is required for stress wave effects to dampen out. For brittle materials, with small strains to failure, it is difficult to satisfy this constraint. Because of this limitation, there are minimal data (if any) available on the stiffness and tensile strength of ceramics at high strain rates. Recently, a new image-based inertial impact (IBII) test method has shown promise for analysing the high strain rate behaviour of brittle materials. This test method uses a reflected compressive stress wave to generate tensile stress and failure in an impacted specimen. Throughout the propagation of the stress wave, full-field displacement measurements are taken, from which strain and acceleration fields are derived. The acceleration fields are then used to reconstruct stress information and identify the material properties. The aim of this study is to apply the IBII test methodology to analyse the stiffness and strength of ceramics at high strain rates. The results show that it is possible to identify the elastic modulus and tensile strength of tungsten carbide at strain rates on the order of 1000 s-1. For a tungsten carbide with 13% cobalt binder the elastic modulus was identified as 516 GPa and the strength was 1400 MPa. Future applications concern boron carbide and sapphire, for which limited data exist in high rate tension.


2013 ◽  
Vol 65 (11) ◽  
pp. 660-672 ◽  
Author(s):  
Ezio Cadoni ◽  
George Solomos ◽  
Carlo Albertini

2011 ◽  
Vol 82 ◽  
pp. 57-62 ◽  
Author(s):  
Sha Sha Wang ◽  
Min Hong Zhang ◽  
Ser Tong Quek

This paper presents a laboratory experimental study on the effect of high strain rate on compressive behavior of plain and fiber-reinforce high-strength concrete (FRHSC) with similar strength of 80-90 MPa. Steel fibers, polyethylene fibers, and a combination of these were used in the FRHSC. A split Hopkinson pressure bar equipment was used to determine the concrete behavior at strain rates from about 30 to 300 s-1. The ratio of the strength at high strain rates to that at static loading condition, namely dynamic increase factor (DIF), of the concretes was determined and compared with that recommended by CEB-FIP code. Fracture patterns of the specimens at high strain rates are described and discussed as well. Results indicate that the CEB-FIP equation is applicable to the plain high strength concrete, but overestimates the DIF of the FRHSC at strain rates beyond a transition strain rate of 30 s-1. Based on the experimental results, a modified equation on DIF is proposed for the FRHSC.


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