4.6 Article

Ductility of 304 stainless steel under pulsed uniaxial loading

Journal

INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL OF SOLIDS AND STRUCTURES
Volume 50, Issue 10, Pages 1621-1633

Publisher

PERGAMON-ELSEVIER SCIENCE LTD
DOI: 10.1016/j.ijsolstr.2013.01.020

Keywords

Pulsed tension; 304 Stainless steel; Deformation-induced heating; Enhanced ductility; Digital image correlation; Infrared thermography; Martensitic transformation; Isothermal tension test

Categories

Funding

  1. U.S. National Science Foundation through the GOALI grant [CMMI 1031169]

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The enhanced ductility that 304 stainless steel is exhibiting under pulsed loading (Zhang and Yuan, 2009) is investigated here using a combination of experiments and analysis. The simplest loading case, i.e., uniaxial tension, was selected to avoid the complicating effects of multiaxial stress states and/or contact and friction with a rigid die. Three types of tensile tests were performed: monotonic, pulsed and hold. For a range of strain rates, the pulsed and the hold tests exhibited different elongation-to-fracture from the monotonic tests. Digital image correlation and infrared thermography were employed to further probe this behavior. It was discovered that since the pulsed tests lasted longer than the corresponding monotonic ones (i.e., those with the same loading speed) but the total plastic work expended was comparable, milder deformation-induced heating developed in the pulsed tests. Since the resulting temperature gradients act as imperfections that trigger the localization of deformation, the enhanced elongation-to-fracture in the pulsed tests was attributed to the milder gradients that developed. Subsequently, a special isothermal tension test was used to de-couple the mechanical from the thermal behavior of the material and was repeated at various strain rates and temperatures. The material properties determined from this test were used as input to coupled, thermomechanical finite element simulations of the experiments. Despite numerous simplifications, such as constant thermal properties with temperature, the simulations captured the essential physics of the problem and yielded very close predictions of the elongation-to-fracture observed in the experiments. (C) 2013 Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved.

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