Karthik Ramalingam, S. Amir H. Motaman, Christian Haase, Ulrich Krupp
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引用次数: 0
Abstract
In this study, a Thermo-micro-mechanical (TMM) model to describe the viscoplastic flow of polycrystalline metallic materials was extended by integration of micromechanical damage. The original TMM model [1] incorporated the fundamentals of dislocation motions during metal deformation, using microstructural state variables (MSVs) for the statistical quantification of dislocations, represented through the dislocation density. These MSVs track dislocation evolution throughout deformation, allowing for the material behavior and mechanical properties in cold and warm regimes (up to 500 °C) to be derived as functions of these state variables. A key advantage of the TMM model is its ability to transfer MSVs across multi-step process chain simulations, thereby accounting for the deformation history of materials in subsequent processes. However, the previous model was limited to the plastic regime and cannot be applied to processes involving damage and fracture. The primary objective of the current study is to extend the TMM model to predict fracture and damage. Therefore, the Gurson-Tveergard-Needleman (GTN) model, a widely recognized micromechanical damage model, was integrated into the TMM model to describe the material behavior comprising plasticity, damage and fracture (D-TMM model). This integration introduces void fraction from the damage model as an additional state variable alongside the existing MSVs, thus enabling the transfer of both deformation history and damage accumulation across the process chain. The constitutive equations from both models are numerically integrated, and their parameters are calibrated for a commonly used micro-alloyed high strength construction steel – S700. The model is subsequently tested under isothermal conditions up to 500 °C, non-isothermal conditions, and across a range of strain rates.
期刊介绍:
The International Journal of Mechanical Sciences (IJMS) serves as a global platform for the publication and dissemination of original research that contributes to a deeper scientific understanding of the fundamental disciplines within mechanical, civil, and material engineering.
The primary focus of IJMS is to showcase innovative and ground-breaking work that utilizes analytical and computational modeling techniques, such as Finite Element Method (FEM), Boundary Element Method (BEM), and mesh-free methods, among others. These modeling methods are applied to diverse fields including rigid-body mechanics (e.g., dynamics, vibration, stability), structural mechanics, metal forming, advanced materials (e.g., metals, composites, cellular, smart) behavior and applications, impact mechanics, strain localization, and other nonlinear effects (e.g., large deflections, plasticity, fracture).
Additionally, IJMS covers the realms of fluid mechanics (both external and internal flows), tribology, thermodynamics, and materials processing. These subjects collectively form the core of the journal's content.
In summary, IJMS provides a prestigious platform for researchers to present their original contributions, shedding light on analytical and computational modeling methods in various areas of mechanical engineering, as well as exploring the behavior and application of advanced materials, fluid mechanics, thermodynamics, and materials processing.