Unveiling the Strain Rate Sensitivity of G18NiCrMo3-6 CAST Steel in Tension/Compression Asymmetry
Abstract
:1. Introduction
2. Materials and Methods
2.1. Studied Material
2.2. Mechanical Testing
2.3. Determination of SRS
3. Results
3.1. Basic Formulation
3.2. Time Integration Procedure
- Initialization: Uptake the material parameters, state variables, and the deformation gradient (F) at beginning of the time increment.
- Computation of strain tensor: Compute the Hencky strain tensor through the use of F (our code was constructed as finite-strain basis in such a way that free body translations were eliminated by means of Hencky strain measure [30], however Kroner decomposition [31] was discarded for the present study). Hencky strain measure is one of the most appropriate ways to deal with moderate deformations [32].
- Check the plasticity criterion: Compute the trial stress (Equation (21)) and check for the yield locus definition (Equation (23)):
- Update state variables:If ≤ 0 → step is elastic (∆λ = 0) thus, conserve the state variables.If > 0 → step is plastic, solve for ∆λ (Equation (20)). Update , , , .
- Finalization: Deliver the state variables and tangent modulus to Abaqus solver for the convergence check. For the present study, perturbation-based numerical tangent matrix formulation is used. (Equation (24)):
3.3. Imposing the Asymmetry and Rate Dependence
4. Results and Discussion
4.1. Mechanical Testing
4.2. Determination of SRS
4.3. FEA Models
5. Conclusions
- The G18NiCrMo3-6 material possess an asymmetric yielding character, in other words, it yields stress in compression at a rate 4% bigger than the tensile one.
- Indeed, the strain hardening and SRS character is also quite asymmetric for the studied material. This fact was quantified with the help of power-law-based flow stress formulation and the determination of the m parameter. From a general point-of-view, SRS is more dominant in the tensile direction; however, it has a decreasing tendency with increasing strain as in the compressive stress states. In the view of the authors’, the shared material data within this study provide an important resource for the upcoming research activities on G18NiCrMo3-6 about which the existing literature data are extremely limited.
- Unlike the tensile test in a medium-strain rate regime, strain softening phenomena were observed in compression tests which were interpreted as the effect of adiabatic heating. Owing to this finding on the compression side, the material exhibits a rate sensitivity character up to a certain strain value but then the strain softening effect contributes to the plastic response. This fact can be handled through defining SRS parameters as a function of strain as in the proposed constitutive model. On the contrary, a conventional Johnson–Cook type formalism cannot catch up with these phenomena where the effect of rate contribution is formulated through a constant multiplier term.
- The created constitutive model (UMAT file) runs without any problem which was formulated on a finite strain basis and uses implicit time integration scheme. This UMAT file could easily serve in inspecting the effect of material parameters (like the initial void volume fraction, etc.) on the macro-mechanical performance of any design which is made up of G18NiCrMo3-6. However, it is also noteworthy that in the proposed model, the void growth is just linked to the volumetric strains, meaning that any void coalescence effect is not included in the formulation. Indeed, this fact may also give rise to precision loss especially in a low-stress triaxiality regime.
- In our view, the present material model and the verified parameter set significantly enhance the technical knowledge level related to the G18NiCrMo3-6 material and would serve as a solid basis for the upcoming research studies. Our efforts will focus on creating proper coupling between the estimated void volume fraction and any appropriate damage rule to improve the proposed model which would account for both damage, void coalescence, and localization phenomena. Furthermore, plasticity-induced heating would also be studied to estimate the strain softening behavior via proper thermo-coupled plasticity formulations.
Author Contributions
Funding
Institutional Review Board Statement
Informed Consent Statement
Data Availability Statement
Conflicts of Interest
Abbreviations
FEA | Finite element analysis |
SRS | Strain rate sensitivity |
UMAT | User subroutine to define a material’s mechanical behavior |
UTS | Ultimate tensile strength |
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C | Si | Mn | Ni | Cr | Mo | Cu | Fe |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
0.20 | 0.50 | 0.90 | 0.80 | 0.50 | 0.45 | 0.15 | Balance |
B | n | ||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Compression | 815.64 (±1.93%) | 862.79 (±1.89%) | 882.18 (±2.89%) | 368.20 | 0.2798 |
Tension | 808.65 (±2.70%) | 858.73 (±2.84%) | 876.80 (±1.36%) | 551.30 | 0.5075 |
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Çetin, B.; Bayraktar, E.; Aslan, O. Unveiling the Strain Rate Sensitivity of G18NiCrMo3-6 CAST Steel in Tension/Compression Asymmetry. Appl. Sci. 2023, 13, 11891. https://doi.org/10.3390/app132111891
Çetin B, Bayraktar E, Aslan O. Unveiling the Strain Rate Sensitivity of G18NiCrMo3-6 CAST Steel in Tension/Compression Asymmetry. Applied Sciences. 2023; 13(21):11891. https://doi.org/10.3390/app132111891
Chicago/Turabian StyleÇetin, Barış, Emin Bayraktar, and Ozgur Aslan. 2023. "Unveiling the Strain Rate Sensitivity of G18NiCrMo3-6 CAST Steel in Tension/Compression Asymmetry" Applied Sciences 13, no. 21: 11891. https://doi.org/10.3390/app132111891
APA StyleÇetin, B., Bayraktar, E., & Aslan, O. (2023). Unveiling the Strain Rate Sensitivity of G18NiCrMo3-6 CAST Steel in Tension/Compression Asymmetry. Applied Sciences, 13(21), 11891. https://doi.org/10.3390/app132111891