A constitutive model on flow stress prediction from the contribution of twin and grain refinement, strain and strain rate during surface mechanical attrition treatment of metals
Author(s) -
Yan LEUNG Wing,
Qiang SHI San,
Jian Lü,
Hui RUAN Hai,
Min ZHOU Li
Publication year - 2016
Publication title -
journal of chemical engineering and materials science
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
ISSN - 2141-6605
DOI - 10.5897/jcems2016.0237
Subject(s) - flow stress , materials science , strain rate , plasticity , constitutive equation , grain size , strain hardening exponent , hardening (computing) , metallurgy , stress (linguistics) , deformation (meteorology) , strain (injury) , composite material , thermodynamics , finite element method , physics , linguistics , philosophy , layer (electronics) , medicine
A new constitutive equation is developed to model the flow stress on a metal surface undergone high speed impacts that result in strain hardening. The new equation is based on the Johnson-Cook model and has considered the effects of strain, strain rate, grain refinement, twin formation and twin spacing. Two mechanisms for the strain hardening are proposed: Grain refinement or twin formation, depending on the strain rate. At low strain rate, the Hall-Petch relation is obeyed, while at high strain rate, the flow stress is controlled by the formation of deformation twins. The theoretical estimation of flow stress agrees well with experimental data for stainless steel 304. According to the new model, the flow stress can be as high as 1.46 GPa at a strain rate of 105 /s.Department of Mechanical Engineering2016-2017 > Academic research: refereed > Publication in refereed journalbcm
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