2. Contributions
As a part of this Special Issue, researchers were invited to submit their innovative research papers aimed at providing a state-of-the-art knowledge on the topic of metal plasticity, creep deformation and fatigue strength of metals operating at high temperatures, with emphasis on both experimental characterization and numerical modeling of material behavior. A total of eleven research papers were published [
1,
2,
3,
4,
5,
6,
7,
8,
9,
10,
11].
Problems correlated with the creep phenomenon have been investigated in [
1,
2]. The paper by Liu et al. [
1] presents an explicit fatigue-creep model which develops one formulation that covers the full range of conditions: from pure fatigue, to creep-fatigue up to pure creep. Kloc et al. [
2] study a complex phenomenological creep model with particular attention focused on transient effects in the creep behavior of the Sanicro 25 steel.
In the paper by Aigner et al. [
3] a model based on the
concept proposed by Murakami is extended to elevated temperature by introducing an additional exponent.
Poulain et al. [
4] examine the dependence and interaction between the effect of pressurized water reactors environment, strain rate and shape of loading waveform on the LCF resistance of a 304L steel in terms of stress-strain response, crack growth, fatigue life and fracture surfaces morphology.
Thermo-mechanical fatigue (TMF) is studied in [
5,
6,
7]. The paper written by Szmytka et al. [
5] provides an overview of a TMF design protocol through the analysis of the specific case of a cylinder head, which summarizes the studies led by the authors over the last five years. Four typical issues in high-temperature design—loading identification, aging and constitutive models, TMF criteria, and validation tests—are addressed and critically analyzed, while some improvements are proposed. In [
6], Wagner et al. work on the identification of a criterion for crack initiation to provide the basis for a nondestructive quality control of TMF-loaded porous components with improved statistical safety. The paper by Ghodrat et al. [
7] presents an adapted version of Paris’ fatigue crack-growth law where cyclic plastic strains at the crack tip are considered as the parameter that controls crack growth. Finally, it is found that the modified Paris’ law is able to assess TMF lifetimes of spheroidal graphite iron (SGI) very well for all constraint levels with a single set of parameters. Crack initiation life models are studied in [
8], where three approaches (one based on Weibull distributed crack initiation life, the other two based on probabilistic Schmid factor) are presented.
The effect of ageing temperature, initial stress levels and pre-strains on the stress-relaxation ageing behavior of aluminium alloy AA7150-T7751 are investigated through a series of experiments and presented in the work of Cai et al. [
9]. The authors discuss a stress relaxation constitutive model with the ability to reproduce stress relaxation curves under different process conditions. The paper by Testa et al. [
10] describes a model to estimate the yield stress at different strain rates and temperatures for metals with body-centered-cubic (bcc) structure. Srnec Novak et al. [
11] develop a new isotropic model to describe the cyclic hardening/softening plasticity behavior of metals. The proposed model is described with three parameters which were calibrated based on LCF experimental data of CuAg alloy. An improvement is observed with respect to another nonlinear isotropic model generally used in the literature.
Papers in this Special Issue addressed different types of material, from stainless steel studied by [
1,
2,
4,
10], to aluminum alloys investigated by [
3,
6,
9], Ni-based supper alloy in [
8], spheroidal graphite iron by [
7], and copper alloy discussed in [
11].
The developed constitutive methods have, in most cases, been compared to experimental data obtained with tensile tests [
3], fatigue tests [
3,
4,
8], TMF tests [
6,
7], creep tests [
2], and stress relaxation, aging tests presented in [
9].
Acknowledgments
As Guest Editors, we thank all authors who contributed to this Special Issue with high-quality manuscripts that shared results of their research activities. Thanks to Assistant Editor Kinsee Guo for his valuable and inexhaustible support during the preparation of this issue, and thanks also to all staff members of Metals Editorial Office for their management and practical support in the publication process of this issue.
Conflicts of Interest
The authors declare no conflict of interest.
Dedication
This Special Issue is dedicated to the memory of Luciano Moro. He was a promising researcher, a colleague, a friend.
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