Stress‐Strain Rate Relations for Anisotropic Plastic Flow

1949 ◽  
Vol 20 (1) ◽  
pp. 15-20 ◽  
Author(s):  
John E. Dorn
1947 ◽  
Vol 14 (3) ◽  
pp. A229-A230
Author(s):  
J. D. Lubahn

Abstract This paper carries out the derivation and correction of an equation previously presented by J. H. Hollomon and the author, relating to stress for plastic flow (σ), plastic strain (ϵ), strain rate (ϵ.), and temperature (T).


Author(s):  
Roman Sivak ◽  
Iryna Нunko ◽  
Roman Zalizniak

Methods of theoretical solution of problems in the processing of metals by pressure are insufficiently developed for practical use in the development and implementation of new technologies and improvement of existing ones. To meet the stringent requirements for the accuracy of determining the stress-strain state, it is necessary to have reliable information about the evolution of the development of the plastic deformation process at each point of the metal from the very beginning of the deformation. This will allow to obtain with high accuracy the important characteristics of the technological heredity of the products that they acquire as a result of their plastic processing. The first and important step in the calculations of the stress-strain state is to obtain the kinematic characteristics of the plastic flow of metal in the form of analytical dependences, which will formulate the patterns of deformation in the technological processes of metal forming. The article considers the possibility of applying the method of current functions to determine the components of the strain rate tensor in established stationary processes of plastic deformation. It is assumed that in the case of axisymmetric plastic deformation of a metal in a channel with curvilinear boundaries, the kinematics of the process is similar to a plane flow. In obtaining the equations, the differential equation of current lines taking into account the incompressibility condition was used to determine the components of the strain rate tensor. To explain the physical meaning of the current functions, two infinitely close current lines were considered in the flow plane, and an expression was obtained for the flow through a finite transverse current tube. In the absence of radial velocity components at the boundaries, constraints are obtained that are imposed on derivatives of current functions at these boundaries. The developed method of calculating the kinematic characteristics of plastic deformation for established axisymmetric stationary processes will simplify the mathematical processing of the obtained results and increase the reliability of the determination of the stress-strain state.


Polymers ◽  
2021 ◽  
Vol 13 (10) ◽  
pp. 1537
Author(s):  
Luděk Hynčík ◽  
Petra Kochová ◽  
Jan Špička ◽  
Tomasz Bońkowski ◽  
Robert Cimrman ◽  
...  

Current industrial trends bring new challenges in energy absorbing systems. Polymer materials as the traditional packaging materials seem to be promising due to their low weight, structure, and production price. Based on the review, the linear low-density polyethylene (LLDPE) material was identified as the most promising material for absorbing impact energy. The current paper addresses the identification of the material parameters and the development of a constitutive material model to be used in future designs by virtual prototyping. The paper deals with the experimental measurement of the stress-strain relations of linear low-density polyethylene under static and dynamic loading. The quasi-static measurement was realized in two perpendicular principal directions and was supplemented by a test measurement in the 45° direction, i.e., exactly between the principal directions. The quasi-static stress-strain curves were analyzed as an initial step for dynamic strain rate-dependent material behavior. The dynamic response was tested in a drop tower using a spherical impactor hitting a flat material multi-layered specimen at two different energy levels. The strain rate-dependent material model was identified by optimizing the static material response obtained in the dynamic experiments. The material model was validated by the virtual reconstruction of the experiments and by comparing the numerical results to the experimental ones.


In previous work, stress-strain curves for the atomic lattice of certain metals have been obtained from X-ray diffraction measurements of the lattice dimensions of test specimens under tension or compression, and it has been shown that when the external yield stress is exceeded, there is a systematic departure from Hooke’s Law. It is pointed out in the present paper that this departure indicates that the external applied stress above the yield is no longer balanced primarily by simple displacement of the atoms but also by a new type of secondary internal stress brought about by the process of plastic flow; and that this secondary stress, being of a permanent nature, can be measured by the residual lattice strains exhibited by the lattice after removal of the external stress. These residual strains are measured in various directions to the stress direction for mild steel subjected to tension, and it is shown that the lattice after tension exhibits a longitudinal compression and a transverse expansion in the ratio of 2:1, which means that the density of the material is thereby kept constant. Comparisons of X-ray and mechanical measurements further show that the hysteresis loop exhibited by the external stress-strain curve of mild steel after overstrain can disappear and the linear elastic relation be recovered without any corresponding change in the internal stress, which is therefore a more fundamental physical property. It is also shown that when the elastic range is extended by overstrain in tension, there is no symmetrical increase in the elastic range in subsequent compression, thus confirming the existence and direction of the secondary internal stress. Finally, the lattice stress-strain curves are also obtained for a 0.4 % C steel (partially pearlitic) and a 0.8 % C steel (pearlitic), and by comparison with the results on pure iron and 0.1 % C steel (annealed) it is shown that the maximum residual internal strain developed by the lattice increases markedly with the fineness to which the crystallites can be broken down by the plastic deformation.


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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