Article ID | Journal | Published Year | Pages | File Type |
---|---|---|---|---|
10620212 | Acta Materialia | 2013 | 21 Pages |
Abstract
A combination of electron back-scattering diffraction and X-ray diffraction was used to track the evolution of the microstructure and texture of a fully recrystallized Fe-24 Mn-3 Al-2 Si-1 Ni-0.06 C twinning-induced-plasticity steel during interrupted uniaxial tensile testing. Texture measurements returned the characteristic double fibre texture for face-centred cubic materials, with a relatively stronger ã1Â 1Â 1ã and a weaker ã1Â 0Â 0ã partial fibre parallel to the tensile axis. The interaction with the stable ã1Â 1Â 1ã oriented grains results in preferential plastic flow in the unstable ã1Â 1Â 0ã oriented grains. Consequently, the grains oriented along the ã1Â 1Â 0ã and ã1Â 0Â 0ã fibres record the highest and lowest values of intragranular local misorientation, respectively. The viscoplastic self-consistent model was used to simulate the macroscopic stress-strain response as well as track the evolution of bulk crystallographic texture by detailing the contributions of perfect and/or partial slip, twinning and latent hardening. The simulations revealed the dominant role of perfect slip and the limited volume effect of twinning on the texture development. The effects of initial orientation and grain interaction on the overall orientation stability during uniaxial tension showed that while the ã1Â 0Â 0ã fibre remains stable and does not affect the unstable orientations along the ã1Â 1Â 0ã fibre, the orientations along the stable ã1Â 1Â 1ã fibre strongly affect the unstable ã1Â 1Â 0ã orientations.
Related Topics
Physical Sciences and Engineering
Materials Science
Ceramics and Composites
Authors
Ahmed A. Saleh, Elena V. Pereloma, Azdiar A. Gazder,