COMPRESSION TESTING TECHNIQUES TO DETERMINE THE STRESS-STRAIN BEHAVIOR OF METALS SUBJECT TO FINITE DEFORMATION

被引:34
|
作者
LOVATO, ML
STOUT, MG
机构
[1] Los Alamos National Laboratory, Los Alamos, 87545, NM
关键词
D O I
10.1007/BF02675569
中图分类号
T [工业技术];
学科分类号
08 ;
摘要
We have investigated techniques to conduct a valid single-increment compression experiment to large strains, epsilon almost-equal-to 1.0. Our investigation included experiments with many different lubricants, specimen-end geometries, five different materials, and temperatures of 22-degrees-C, 315-degrees-C, and 600-degrees-C. We found that for materials with a work-hardening exponent greater than 0.15 and a slightly positive strain-rate sensitivity, the best technique was to cut concentric grooves into the ends of the compression sample and to use polished platens and a molybdenum-disulfide grease-base lubricant. This technique gave valid stress/strain data and uniform displacement fields (as determined by metallography of the deformed specimen cross sections). At all temperatures, satisfactory results were also obtained using a MOLYKOTE spray lubricant. We investigated both well-lubricated experimental conditions (the concentric specimen grooves and Molygrease lubrication and TEFLON sheet lubrication) as well as poor lubrication conditions. The poorest lubrication was achieved by using a set of platens which had grooves cut in them to prevent any expansion by the ends of the specimen during deformation. Up to a compressive strain of 0.5, the load/displacement data from all of these lubrication conditions were almost identical. This was the case for materials with a work-hardening exponent > 0.15. Despite the similarity of the "average" stress/strain data to epsilon = 0.5 for all lubrication conditions, metallographic cross sections showed that the deformation was nonuniform for the poorly lubricated experiments. The results of the experiments show that a single increment compression test can be used to obtain accurate constitutive behavior of many materials to large deformations, epsilon almost-equal-to 1.0. In addition, we have found that the compression test is relatively insensitive to lubrication conditions for many materials through moderate deformations, epsilon almost-equal-to 0.5.
引用
收藏
页码:935 / 951
页数:17
相关论文
共 50 条