Article ID Journal Published Year Pages File Type
802777 Mechanics of Materials 2014 16 Pages PDF
Abstract

•Thermo-mechanical response of nitrogen-alloyed steels is studied at high strain rates.•A combined approach of two different principal mechanisms is considered in the constitutive modeling.•The flow stress was accurately predicted using microstructures-based material parameters.•Two different definitions for the strain hardening are considered.•The effect of the physical quantitates at the microstructures on the alloys’ response is investigated.

In this paper, microstructures-based constitutive relations are introduced to simulate the thermo-mechanical response of two nitrogen-alloyed austenitic stainless steels; Nitronic-50 and Uranus-B66, under static and dynamic loadings. The simulation of the flow stress is developed based on a combined approach of two different principal mechanisms; the cutting of dislocation forests and the overcoming of Peierls–Nabarro barriers. The experimental observations for Nitronic-50 and Uranus-B66 conducted by Guo and Nemat-Nasser (2006) and Fréchard et al. (2008), respectively, over a wide range of temperatures and strain rates are also utilized in understanding the underlying deformation mechanisms. Results for the two stainless steels reveal that both the initial yielding and strain hardening are strongly dependent on the coupling effect of temperatures and strain rates. The methodology of obtaining the material parameters and their physical interpretation are presented thoroughly. The present model predicts results that compare very well with the experimental data for both stainless steels at initial temperature range of 77–1000 K and strain rates between 0.001 and 8000 s−1. The effect of the physical quantities at the microstructures on the overall flow stress is also investigated. The evolution of dislocation density along with the initial dislocation density contribution plays a crucial role in determining the thermal stresses. It was observed that the thermal yield stress component is more affected by the presence of initial dislocations and decreases with the increase of the originated (initial) dislocation density.

Related Topics
Physical Sciences and Engineering Engineering Mechanical Engineering
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