Article ID Journal Published Year Pages File Type
1578207 Materials Science and Engineering: A 2011 7 Pages PDF
Abstract

The Bauschinger effect of three commercially produced medium carbon bar steels representing different microstructural classes with similar tensile strengths and substantially different yielding and work-hardening behaviors at low-strain was evaluated at room temperature and in situ at temperatures up to 361 °C. The influence of deformation at dynamic strain aging temperatures as a means to produce a more stable dislocation structure was evaluated by measuring the resistance to strain reversal during in situ Bauschinger effect tests. It was shown that the three medium carbon steels exhibited substantial increases in strength at dynamic strain aging temperatures with the peak in flow stress occurring at a test temperature of 260 °C for an engineering strain rate of 10−4 s−1. Compressive flow stress data following tensile plastic prestrain levels of 0.01, 0.02 and 0.03 increased with an increase in temperature to a range between 260 °C and 309 °C, the temperature range where dynamic strain aging was shown to be most effective. The increased resistance to flow on strain reversal at elevated temperature was attributed to the generation of more stable dislocation structures during prestrain. It is suggested that Bauschinger effect measurements can be used to assess the potential performance of materials in fatigue loading conditions and to identify temperature ranges for processing in applications that utilize non-uniform plastic deformation (e.g. shot peening, deep rolling, etc.) to induce controlled residual stress fields stabilized by the processing at temperatures where dynamic strain aging is active.

► Effect of test temperature on deformation behavior in three medium carbon steels. ► Effect of dynamic strain aging on the Bauschinger effect. ► Microstructures containing retained austenite exhibit decreased Bauschinger effect. ► Microstructures with ferrite and pearlite exhibit equivalent Bauschinger effect. ► Dynamic strain aging shown to increase resistance to strain reversal.

Related Topics
Physical Sciences and Engineering Materials Science Materials Science (General)
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