Title: Basics of mechanical properties of metals
1Basics of mechanical properties of metals
- Jean-Philippe Chateau
- Ecole des Mines de Nancy
- Institut Jean Lamour
2Lectures
- Lattice deformation
- Macroscopic behaviour
- 1) Tensile test
- 2) Polycrystal
- 3) Alternative deformation mechanisms
- Effect of temperature and strain rate
- Failiure
3Macroscopic behaviour1) Tensile test
4Engineering stress-strain curve
- measure the force (simple)
- measure the elongation (not so easy)
Fe-22Mn-0.6C at 400C
applied force (N)
engineering stress s (MPa)
fracture
S0 4.4 mm2 L0 24.3 mm
elongation DL (mm)
engineering strain e ()
5Mechanical characteristics
- stiffness
- Youngs modulus E
- resistance
- yield stress sy, R0.2
- ultimate tensile strength su Fmax/S0
- ductility
- elongation to fracture eF
- area reduction q
- SF measured in the fractured zone
6Typical behaviours
annealed copper
annealed mild steel
elastic
elastic
rubber
polypropylene
7Compared mechanical characteristics
- eF ? when sy, su ?
- metals
- best compromise
8True stress-strain curve
- true stress
- plastic deformation occurs by glide
- no volume change
- true strain
- the actual gauge length L increases
- Uniform strain eu
- strain at maximum load (N)
- Fracture strain
- stress strain law s f(e)
- to be used in FEM simulations
- and not s f(e) !
9Empirical laws
- Hollomons law
- strain hardening coefficient
- Ludwiks law
- Swifts law
sy
10Necking
- strain localisation at maximum load
- at Fmax
- volume conservation
- Considères criterion
- q s stress increase due to hardening higher
than stress increase due to local section
reduction - q
or
11Strain localisation
Localised or diffuse necking
- Fe-22Mn-0.6C
- at different temperatures
- grain size 2.5 µm
- high elongation due to high
- hardening rate
- Annealed Mild steel
- dislocations pinned by carbon atoms
- immediate softening at yield point
- Lüders bands
strain hardening rate n
line n e
true strain
12Macroscopic behaviour 2) Polycristal
13Microscopic vs macroscopic yield stress
- microscopic yield stress
- deformation of grains with the maximum resolved
shear stress - ? 1 slip sytem / m 0.5
- dislocations are blocked at the grain boundaries
- small deformation
- not measurable by the tensile test
- macroscopic stress
- deformation extends to all the grains
- sy measured by the tensile test
14Relation between sy and tc ?
- Sachs formulation
- no texture random orientation of grains
- deformation mainly achieved by the primary system
in each grain - average Schmid factor on primary systems
- Von Mises condition
- ep 6 components (symmetrical)
- constant volume Tr(ep) 0
- 5 degrees of freedom 5 slip systems
- Taylor formulation
- energetic criterion to select the 5 slip systems
f.c.c. metals
15Influence of the grain boundaries
- Sachs and Taylor
- poor correlation with experiment
- pure polycristalline Cu sy tens of MPa tc 1 MPa
- polycrystals do not behave like
- a group of isolated crystals
- strain incompatibilities at
- the grain boundaries
- Hall Petch law A
predeformed pure Cu
A MSachs tc
16Macroscopic behaviour 3) Alternative
deformation mechanisms
17Intergranular glide
tg
- Grain boundaries have their own resistance
- sIG 2 tg
- Intragranular deformation
-
- If sIG
- deformation is achieved by grain boundary gliding
- Limit of the Hall Petch law
- HP not valid for small grain sizes (µm)
- superplastic behaviour (eu 1)
18Mechanical twinning
- Twin
- crystal with a symmetry relation with the host
lattice
- f.c.c.
- achieved by glide of Shockley partial
dislocations on parallel 111 planes - twinning systems 111
- b.c.c.
- twin plane 112
- twin direction
19Mechanical twinning
- twins produce a permanent glide
- f.c.c., b.c.c.
- h.c.p.
- participates to plastic deformation
- h.c.p.
- Von Mises condition 5 slip systems required to
achieve a given deformation - Zn, Sn mainly basal glide 3 slip systems, only
1 plane - f.c.c.
- low stacking fault energy
- dislocations largely dissociated
- Shockley partials can move individually to
achieve the glide - b.c.c.
- dislocation glide is difficult
- at low temperature
20TWIP effect
400ºC, SFE 90 mJ/m2
- Twinning Induced Palsticity
- Fe-22Mn-0.6C
- metastable f.c.c. structure
- low stacking fault energy increasing with T
- increasing volume fraction of mocrotwins along
with deformation
25ºC, SFE 20 mJ/m2
disloca-tions twins
thermochemical model of the SFE
disloca-tions
21TWIP effect
- twin boundaries are strong obstacles
- twin boundary grain boundary
- decrease of the mean free path of the
- dislocations
- dynamical Hall Petch effect
- very high hardening rate
- elongation 50 UTS 1 GPa
1600
Emboutis à chaud
1400
Multiphasés
1200
1000
tensile strength (MPa)
TWIP
TRIP
800
Dual Phase
600
Rephosphoré, BH
400
HSLA
Extra-Doux
200
0
0
10
20
30
40
50
60
elongation ()
22TRIP effect
-196ºC, SFE 7 mJ/m2
- Tansformation Induced Palsticity
- Fe-22Mn-0.6C
- metastable f.c.c. structure
- e-martensite (h.c.p.) more stable at low
temperature - achieved by glide of Shockley partials
- every 2 111 planes
- same effect as TWIP effect
23Shape memory and pseudo elasticity
- phase transformation
- cooling austenite ? martensite between MS and
MF - heating martensite ? austenite between AS and
AF - MF
- hysteresis due to the creation of heterophase
interfaces - displacive transformation
- the transformation temperatures increase with the
applied stress - Ni-Ti
- Cu-Al-Ni
- Cu-Al-Zn
- Fe-Mn-Si-C
shape memory
pseudo elasticity
reversible strain up to 10
24- Plastic deformation
- thermally activated mechanisms
- Part III influence of the loading conditions
- temperature
- strain rate
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