Viscoplasticity is a theory in
continuum mechanics
Continuum mechanics is a branch of mechanics that deals with the mechanical behavior of materials modeled as a continuous mass rather than as discrete particles. The French mathematician Augustin-Louis Cauchy was the first to formulate such ...
that describes the rate-dependent inelastic behavior of solids. Rate-dependence in this context means that the
deformation of the material depends on the rate at which
loads are applied.
The inelastic behavior that is the subject of viscoplasticity is
plastic deformation
In engineering, deformation refers to the change in size or shape of an object. ''Displacements'' are the ''absolute'' change in position of a point on the object. Deflection is the relative change in external displacements on an object. Strai ...
which means that the material undergoes unrecoverable deformations when a load level is reached. Rate-dependent plasticity is important for transient plasticity calculations. The main difference between rate-independent plastic and viscoplastic material models is that the latter exhibit not only permanent deformations after the application of loads but continue to undergo a
creep
Creep, Creeps or CREEP may refer to:
People
* Creep, a creepy person
Politics
* Committee for the Re-Election of the President (CRP), mockingly abbreviated as CREEP, an fundraising organization for Richard Nixon's 1972 re-election campaign
Art ...
flow as a function of time under the influence of the applied load.
The elastic response of viscoplastic materials can be represented in one-dimension by
Hookean spring elements. Rate-dependence can be represented by nonlinear
dashpot
A dashpot, also known as a damper, is a mechanical device that resists motion via viscous friction. The resulting force is proportional to the velocity, but acts in the opposite direction, slowing the motion and absorbing energy. It is commonly us ...
elements in a manner similar to
viscoelasticity
In materials science and continuum mechanics, viscoelasticity is the property of materials that exhibit both viscous and elastic characteristics when undergoing deformation. Viscous materials, like water, resist shear flow and strain linear ...
. Plasticity can be accounted for by adding sliding
friction
Friction is the force resisting the relative motion of solid surfaces, fluid layers, and material elements sliding (motion), sliding against each other. There are several types of friction:
*Dry friction is a force that opposes the relative la ...
al elements as shown in Figure 1. In the figure E is the
modulus of elasticity
An elastic modulus (also known as modulus of elasticity) is the unit of measurement of an object's or substance's resistance to being deformed elastically (i.e., non-permanently) when a stress is applied to it. The elastic modulus of an object is ...
, λ is the
viscosity
The viscosity of a fluid is a measure of its resistance to deformation at a given rate. For liquids, it corresponds to the informal concept of "thickness": for example, syrup has a higher viscosity than water.
Viscosity quantifies the inte ...
parameter and N is a
power-law
In statistics, a power law is a functional relationship between two quantities, where a relative change in one quantity results in a proportional relative change in the other quantity, independent of the initial size of those quantities: one ...
type parameter that represents non-linear dashpot
(1/N)">ïżœ(dΔ/dt)= Ï = λ(dΔ/dt)(1/N) The sliding element can have a
yield stress (Ï
y) that is
strain rate dependent, or even constant, as shown in Figure 1c.
Viscoplasticity is usually modeled in three-dimensions using ''overstress models'' of the Perzyna or Duvaut-Lions types.
[ In these models, the stress is allowed to increase beyond the rate-independent yield surface upon application of a load and then allowed to relax back to the yield surface over time. The yield surface is usually assumed not to be rate-dependent in such models. An alternative approach is to add a strain rate dependence to the yield stress and use the techniques of rate independent plasticity to calculate the response of a material]
For metal
A metal (from Greek ÎŒÎÏÎ±Î»Î»ÎżÎœ ''mĂ©tallon'', "mine, quarry, metal") is a material that, when freshly prepared, polished, or fractured, shows a lustrous appearance, and conducts electricity and heat relatively well. Metals are typi ...
s and alloy
An alloy is a mixture of chemical elements of which at least one is a metal. Unlike chemical compounds with metallic bases, an alloy will retain all the properties of a metal in the resulting material, such as electrical conductivity, ductilit ...
s, viscoplasticity is the macroscopic
The macroscopic scale is the length scale on which objects or phenomena are large enough to be visible with the naked eye, without magnifying optical instruments. It is the opposite of microscopic.
Overview
When applied to physical phenomena ...
behavior caused by a mechanism linked to the movement of dislocation
In materials science, a dislocation or Taylor's dislocation is a linear crystallographic defect or irregularity within a crystal structure that contains an abrupt change in the arrangement of atoms. The movement of dislocations allow atoms to ...
s in grain
A grain is a small, hard, dry fruit ( caryopsis) â with or without an attached hull layer â harvested for human or animal consumption. A grain crop is a grain-producing plant. The two main types of commercial grain crops are cereals and legu ...
s, with superposed effects of inter-crystalline gliding. The mechanism usually becomes dominant at temperatures greater than approximately one third of the absolute melting temperature. However, certain alloys exhibit viscoplasticity at room temperature (300K). For polymer
A polymer (; Greek ''poly-'', "many" + '' -mer'', "part")
is a substance or material consisting of very large molecules called macromolecules, composed of many repeating subunits. Due to their broad spectrum of properties, both synthetic and ...
s, wood
Wood is a porous and fibrous structural tissue found in the stems and roots of trees and other woody plants. It is an organic materiala natural composite of cellulose fibers that are strong in tension and embedded in a matrix of ligni ...
, and bitumen
Asphalt, also known as bitumen (, ), is a sticky, black, highly viscous liquid or semi-solid form of petroleum. It may be found in natural deposits or may be a refined product, and is classed as a pitch. Before the 20th century, the term ...
, the theory of viscoplasticity is required to describe behavior beyond the limit of elasticity or viscoelasticity
In materials science and continuum mechanics, viscoelasticity is the property of materials that exhibit both viscous and elastic characteristics when undergoing deformation. Viscous materials, like water, resist shear flow and strain linear ...
.
In general, viscoplasticity theories are useful in areas such as:
* the calculation of permanent deformations,
* the prediction of the plastic collapse of structures,
* the investigation of stability,
* crash simulations,
* systems exposed to high temperatures such as turbines in engines, e.g. a power plant,
* dynamic problems and systems exposed to high strain rates.
History
Research on plasticity theories started in 1864 with the work of Henri Tresca, Saint Venant (1870) and Levy (1871) on the maximum shear criterion.[Kojic, M. and Bathe, K-J., (2006), Inelastic Analysis of Solids and Structures, Elsevier.] An improved plasticity model was presented in 1913 by Von Mises
Mises or von Mises may refer to:
* Ludwig von Mises, an Austrian-American economist of the Austrian School, older brother of Richard von Mises
** Mises Institute, or the Ludwig von Mises Institute for Austrian Economics, named after Ludwig von ...
[von Mises, R. (1913) "Mechanik der festen Korper im plastisch deformablen Zustand." ''Gottinger Nachr, math-phys Kl'' 1913:582â592.] which is now referred to as the von Mises yield criterion
The maximum distortion criterion (also von Mises yield criterion) states that yielding of a ductile material begins when the second invariant of deviatoric stress J_2 reaches a critical value. It is a part of plasticity theory that mostly applie ...
. In viscoplasticity, the development of a mathematical model heads back to 1910 with the representation of primary creep by Andrade's law.[Betten, J., 2005, Creep Mechanics: 2nd Ed., Springer.] In 1929, Norton[Norton, F. H. (1929). Creep of steel at high temperatures. McGraw-Hill Book Co., New York.] developed a one-dimensional dashpot model which linked the rate of secondary creep to the stress. In 1934, Odqvist[Odqvist, F. K. G. (1934) "Creep stresses in a rotating disc." ''Proc. IV Int. Congress for Applied. Mechanics'', Cambridge, p. 228.] generalized Norton's law to the multi-axial case.
Concepts such as the normality of plastic flow to the yield surface and flow rules for plasticity were introduced by Prandtl (1924)[Prandtl, L. (1924) Proceedings of the 1st International Congress on Applied Mechanics, Delft.] and Reuss (1930). In 1932, Hohenemser and Prager proposed the first model for slow viscoplastic flow. This model provided a relation between the deviatoric stress
In continuum mechanics, the Cauchy stress tensor \boldsymbol\sigma, true stress tensor, or simply called the stress tensor is a second order tensor named after Augustin-Louis Cauchy. The tensor consists of nine components \sigma_ that completely ...
and the strain rate for an incompressible Bingham solid[Bingham, E. C. (1922) Fluidity and plasticity. McGraw-Hill, New York.] However, the application of these theories did not begin before 1950, where limit theorems were discovered.
In 1960, the first IUTAM
The International Union for Theoretical and Applied Mechanics (IUTAM) is an affiliation of about 500 mechanicians in about 50 countries, and involving about 20 associated organizations, including the International Council for Science (ICSU). The p ...
Symposium âCreep in Structuresâ organized by Hoff[Hoff, ed., 1962, IUTAM Colloquium Creep in Structures; 1st, Stanford, Springer.] provided a major development in viscoplasticity with the works of Hoff, Rabotnov, Perzyna, Hult, and Lemaitre for the isotropic hardening laws, and those of Kratochvil, Malinini and Khadjinsky, Ponter and Leckie, and Chaboche for the kinematic hardening laws. Perzyna, in 1963, introduced a viscosity coefficient that is temperature and time dependent. The formulated models were supported by the thermodynamics
Thermodynamics is a branch of physics that deals with heat, work, and temperature, and their relation to energy, entropy, and the physical properties of matter and radiation. The behavior of these quantities is governed by the four laws o ...
of irreversible processes and the phenomenological
Phenomenology may refer to:
Art
* Phenomenology (architecture), based on the experience of building materials and their sensory properties
Philosophy
* Phenomenology (philosophy), a branch of philosophy which studies subjective experiences and a ...
standpoint. The ideas presented in these works have been the basis for most subsequent research into rate-dependent plasticity.
Phenomenology
For a qualitative analysis, several characteristic tests are performed to describe the phenomenology of viscoplastic materials. Some examples of these tests are [
#hardening tests at constant stress or strain rate,
#creep tests at constant force, and
#stress relaxation at constant elongation.
]
Strain hardening test
One consequence of yielding is that as plastic deformation proceeds, an increase in stress is required to produce additional strain. This phenomenon is known as Strain/Work hardening. For a viscoplastic material the hardening curves are not significantly different from those of rate-independent plastic material. Nevertheless, three essential differences can be observed.
# At the same strain, the higher the rate of strain the higher the stress
# A change in the rate of strain during the test results in an immediate change in the stressâstrain curve.
# The concept of a plastic yield limit is no longer strictly applicable.
The hypothesis of partitioning the strains by decoupling the elastic and plastic parts is still applicable where the strains are small,[ i.e.,
:
where is the elastic strain and is the viscoplastic strain. To obtain the stressâstrain behavior shown in blue in the figure, the material is initially loaded at a strain rate of 0.1/s. The strain rate is then instantaneously raised to 100/s and held constant at that value for some time. At the end of that time period the strain rate is dropped instantaneously back to 0.1/s and the cycle is continued for increasing values of strain. There is clearly a lag between the strain-rate change and the stress response. This lag is modeled quite accurately by overstress models (such as the Perzyna model) but not by models of rate-independent plasticity that have a rate-dependent yield stress.
]
Creep test
Creep
Creep, Creeps or CREEP may refer to:
People
* Creep, a creepy person
Politics
* Committee for the Re-Election of the President (CRP), mockingly abbreviated as CREEP, an fundraising organization for Richard Nixon's 1972 re-election campaign
Art ...
is the tendency of a solid material to slowly move or deform permanently under constant stresses. Creep tests measure the strain response due to a constant stress as shown in Figure 3. The classical creep curve represents the evolution of strain as a function of time in a material subjected to uniaxial stress at a constant temperature. The creep test, for instance, is performed by applying a constant force/stress and analyzing the strain response of the system. In general, as shown in Figure 3b this curve usually shows three phases or periods of behavior[
# A primary creep stage, also known as transient creep, is the starting stage during which hardening of the material leads to a decrease in the rate of flow which is initially very high. .
# The secondary creep stage, also known as the steady state, is where the strain rate is constant. .
# A tertiary creep phase in which there is an increase in the strain rate up to the fracture strain. .
]
Relaxation test
As shown in Figure 4, the relaxation test[François, D., Pineau, A., Zaoui, A., (1993), Mechanical Behaviour of Materials Volume II: Viscoplasticity, Damage, Fracture and Contact Mechanics, Kluwer Academic Publishers.] is defined as the stress response due to a constant strain for a period of time. In viscoplastic materials, relaxation tests demonstrate the stress relaxation in uniaxial loading at a constant strain. In fact, these tests characterize the viscosity and can be used to determine the relation which exists between the stress and the rate of viscoplastic strain. The decomposition of strain rate is
:
The elastic part of the strain rate is given by
:
For the flat region of the strain-time curve, the total strain rate is zero. Hence we have,
:
Therefore, the relaxation curve can be used to determine rate of viscoplastic strain and hence the viscosity of the dashpot in a one-dimensional viscoplastic material model. The residual value that is reached when the stress has plateaued at the end of a relaxation test corresponds to the upper limit of elasticity. For some materials such as rock salt such an upper limit of elasticity occurs at a very small value of stress and relaxation tests can be continued for more than a year without any observable plateau in the stress.
It is important to note that relaxation tests are extremely difficult to perform because maintaining the condition in a test requires considerable delicacy.[Cristescu, N. and Gioda, G., (1994), Viscoplastic Behaviour of Geomaterials, International Centre for Mechanical Sciences.]
Rheological models of viscoplasticity
One-dimensional constitutive models for viscoplasticity based on spring-dashpot-slider elements include[
the perfectly viscoplastic solid, the elastic perfectly viscoplastic solid, and the elastoviscoplastic hardening solid. The elements may be connected in series or in parallel. In models where the elements are connected in series the strain is additive while the stress is equal in each element. In parallel connections, the stress is additive while the strain is equal in each element. Many of these one-dimensional models can be generalized to three dimensions for the small strain regime. In the subsequent discussion, time rates strain and stress are written as and , respectively.
]
Perfectly viscoplastic solid (Norton-Hoff model)
In a perfectly viscoplastic solid, also called the Norton-Hoff model of viscoplasticity, the stress (as for viscous fluids) is a function of the rate of permanent strain. The effect of elasticity is neglected in the model, i.e., and hence there is no initial yield stress, i.e., . The viscous dashpot has a response given by
:
where is the viscosity of the dashpot. In the Norton-Hoff model the viscosity is a nonlinear function of the applied stress and is given by
:
where is a fitting parameter, λ is the kinematic viscosity of the material and . Then the viscoplastic strain rate is given by the relation
:
In one-dimensional form, the Norton-Hoff model can be expressed as
:
When the solid is viscoelastic
In materials science and continuum mechanics, viscoelasticity is the property of materials that exhibit both viscous and elastic characteristics when undergoing deformation. Viscous materials, like water, resist shear flow and strain linear ...
.
If we assume that plastic flow is isochoric (volume preserving), then the above relation can be expressed in the more familiar form[Rappaz, M., Bellet, M. and Deville, M., (1998), Numerical Modeling in Materials Science and Engineering, Springer.]
:
where is the deviatoric stress
In continuum mechanics, the Cauchy stress tensor \boldsymbol\sigma, true stress tensor, or simply called the stress tensor is a second order tensor named after Augustin-Louis Cauchy. The tensor consists of nine components \sigma_ that completely ...
tensor, is the von Mises equivalent strain rate, and are material parameters. The equivalent strain rate is defined as
:
These models can be applied in metals and alloys at temperatures higher than two thirds[ of their absolute melting point (in kelvins) and polymers/asphalt at elevated temperature. The responses for strain hardening, creep, and relaxation tests of such material are shown in Figure 6.
]
Elastic perfectly viscoplastic solid (BinghamâNorton model)
Two types of elementary approaches can be used to build up an elastic-perfectly viscoplastic mode. In the first situation, the sliding friction element and the dashpot are arranged in parallel and then connected in series to the elastic spring as shown in Figure 7. This model is called the BinghamâMaxwell model (by analogy with the Maxwell model and the Bingham model) or the BinghamâNorton model.[Irgens, F., (2008), Continuum Mechanics, Springer.] In the second situation, all three elements are arranged in parallel. Such a model is called a BinghamâKelvin model by analogy with the Kelvin model.
For elastic-perfectly viscoplastic materials, the elastic strain is no longer considered negligible but the rate of plastic strain is only a function of the initial yield stress and there is no influence of hardening. The sliding element represents a constant yielding stress when the elastic limit is exceeded irrespective of the strain. The model can be expressed as
:
where is the viscosity of the dashpot element. If the dashpot element has a response that is of the Norton form
:
we get the BinghamâNorton model
:
Other expressions for the strain rate can also be observed in the literature[ with the general form
:
The responses for strain hardening, creep, and relaxation tests of such material are shown in Figure 8.
]
Elastoviscoplastic hardening solid
An elastic-viscoplastic material with strain hardening
In materials science, work hardening, also known as strain hardening, is the strengthening of a metal or polymer by plastic deformation. Work hardening may be desirable, undesirable, or inconsequential, depending on the context.
This strength ...
is described by equations similar to those for an elastic-viscoplastic material with perfect plasticity. However, in this case the stress depends both on the plastic strain rate and on the plastic strain itself. For an elastoviscoplastic material the stress, after exceeding the yield stress, continues to increase beyond the initial yielding point. This implies that the yield stress in the sliding element increases with strain and the model may be expressed in generic terms as
:.
This model is adopted when metals and alloys are at medium and higher temperatures and wood under high loads. The responses for strain hardening, creep, and relaxation tests of such a material are shown in Figure 9.
Strain-rate dependent plasticity models
Classical phenomenological viscoplasticity models for small strains are usually categorized into two types:
* the Perzyna formulation
* the DuvautâLions formulation
Perzyna formulation
In the Perzyna formulation the plastic strain rate is assumed to be given by a constitutive relation of the form
:
where is a yield function, is the Cauchy stress, is a set of internal variables (such as the plastic strain
In materials science and engineering, the yield point is the point on a stress-strain curve that indicates the limit of elastic behavior and the beginning of plastic behavior. Below the yield point, a material will deform elastically and wi ...
), is a relaxation time. The notation denotes the Macaulay brackets
Macaulay brackets are a notation used to describe the ramp function
The ramp function is a unary real function, whose graph is shaped like a ramp. It can be expressed by numerous definitions, for example "0 for negative inputs, output equals in ...
. The flow rule used in various versions of the ''Chaboche'' model is a special case of Perzyna's flow rule and has the form
:
where is the quasistatic value of and is a ''backstress''. Several models for the backstress also go by the name ''Chaboche model''.
DuvautâLions formulation
The DuvautâLions formulation is equivalent to the Perzyna formulation and may be expressed as
:
where is the elastic stiffness tensor, is the closest point projection of the stress state on to the boundary of the region that bounds all possible elastic stress states. The quantity is typically found from the rate-independent solution to a plasticity problem.
Flow stress models
The quantity represents the evolution of the yield surface. The yield function is often expressed as an equation consisting of some invariant of stress and a model for the yield stress (or plastic flow stress). An example is von Mises
Mises or von Mises may refer to:
* Ludwig von Mises, an Austrian-American economist of the Austrian School, older brother of Richard von Mises
** Mises Institute, or the Ludwig von Mises Institute for Austrian Economics, named after Ludwig von ...
or plasticity. In those situations the plastic strain rate is calculated in the same manner as in rate-independent plasticity. In other situations, the yield stress model provides a direct means of computing the plastic strain rate.
Numerous empirical and semi-empirical flow stress models are used the computational plasticity. The following temperature and strain-rate dependent models provide a sampling of the models in current use:
#the JohnsonâCook model
#the SteinbergâCochranâGuinanâLund model.
#the ZerilliâArmstrong model.
#the Mechanical threshold stress model.
#the PrestonâTonksâWallace model.
The JohnsonâCook (JC) model is purely empirical and is the most widely used of the five. However, this model exhibits an unrealistically small strain-rate dependence at high temperatures. The SteinbergâCochranâGuinanâLund (SCGL) model [
] is semi-empirical. The model is purely empirical and strain-rate independent at high strain-rates. A dislocation-based extension based on [
] is used at low strain-rates. The SCGL model is used extensively by the shock physics community. The ZerilliâArmstrong (ZA) model [
] is a simple physically based model that has been used extensively. A more complex model that is based on ideas from dislocation dynamics is the Mechanical Threshold Stress (MTS) model.[
] This model has been used to model the plastic deformation of copper, tantalum, alloys of steel,[
][
] and aluminum alloys. However, the MTS model is limited to strain-rates less than around 107/s. The PrestonâTonksâWallace (PTW) model is also physically based and has a form similar to the MTS model. However, the PTW model has components that can model plastic deformation in the overdriven shock regime (strain-rates greater that 107/s). Hence this model is valid for the largest range of strain-rates among the five flow stress models.
JohnsonâCook flow stress model
The JohnsonâCook (JC) model [ is purely empirical and gives the following relation for the flow stress ()
:
where is the equivalent plastic strain, is the
plastic strain-rate, and are material constants.
The normalized strain-rate and temperature in equation (1) are defined as
:
where is the effective plastic strain-rate of the quasi-static test used to determine the yield and hardening parameters A,B and n. This is not as it is often thought just a parameter to make non-dimensional.][Schwer http://www.dynalook.com/european-conf-2007/optional-strain-rate-forms-for-the-johnson-cook.pdf] is a reference temperature, and is a reference melt temperature. For conditions where , we assume that .
SteinbergâCochranâGuinanâLund flow stress model
The SteinbergâCochranâGuinanâLund (SCGL) model is a semi-empirical model that was developed by Steinberg et al.[ for high strain-rate situations and extended to low strain-rates and bcc materials by Steinberg and Lund.][ The flow stress in this model is given by
:
where is the athermal component of the flow stress, is a function that represents strain hardening, is the thermally activated component of the flow stress, is the pressure- and temperature-dependent shear modulus, and is the shear modulus at standard temperature and pressure. The saturation value of the athermal stress is . The saturation of the thermally activated stress is the Peierls stress (). The shear modulus for this model is usually computed with the SteinbergâCochranâGuinan shear modulus model.
The strain hardening function () has the form
:
where are work hardening parameters, and is the
initial equivalent plastic strain.
The thermal component () is computed using a bisection algorithm from the following equation.][
:
where is the energy to form a kink-pair in a dislocation segment of length , is the Boltzmann constant, is the Peierls stress. The constants are given by the relations
:
where is the ]dislocation density
In materials science, a dislocation or Taylor's dislocation is a linear crystallographic defect or irregularity within a crystal structure that contains an abrupt change in the arrangement of atoms. The movement of dislocations allow atoms to sl ...
, is the length of a dislocation segment, is the distance between Peierls valleys, is the magnitude of the Burgers vector
In materials science, the Burgers vector, named after Dutch physicist Jan Burgers, is a vector, often denoted as , that represents the magnitude and direction of the lattice distortion resulting from a dislocation in a crystal lattice.
The vec ...
, is the Debye frequency
In thermodynamics and solid-state physics, the Debye model is a method developed by Peter Debye in 1912 for estimating the phonon contribution to the specific heat (Heat capacity) in a solid. It treats the vibrations of the atomic lattice (hea ...
, is the width of a kink loop, and is the drag coefficient
In fluid dynamics, the drag coefficient (commonly denoted as: c_\mathrm, c_x or c_) is a dimensionless quantity that is used to quantify the drag or resistance of an object in a fluid environment, such as air or water. It is used in the drag e ...
.
ZerilliâArmstrong flow stress model
The ZerilliâArmstrong (ZA) model [
][
] is based on simplified dislocation mechanics. The general form of the equation for the flow stress is
:
In this model, is the athermal component of the flow stress given by
:
where is the contribution due to solutes and initial dislocation density, is the microstructural stress intensity, is the average grain diameter, is zero for fcc materials, are material constants.
In the thermally activated terms, the functional forms of the exponents and are
:
where are material parameters that depend on the type of material (fcc, bcc, hcp, alloys). The ZerilliâArmstrong model has been modified by [
] for better performance at high temperatures.
Mechanical threshold stress flow stress model
The Mechanical Threshold Stress (MTS) model [
][
]) has the form
:
where is the athermal component of mechanical threshold stress, is the component of the flow stress due to intrinsic barriers to thermally activated dislocation motion and dislocation-dislocation interactions, is the component of the flow stress due to microstructural evolution with increasing deformation (strain hardening), () are temperature and strain-rate dependent scaling factors, and is the shear modulus at 0 K and ambient pressure.
The scaling factors take the Arrhenius form
:
where is the Boltzmann constant, is the magnitude of the Burgers' vector, () are normalized activation energies, () are the strain-rate and reference strain-rate, and () are constants.
The strain hardening component of the mechanical threshold stress () is given by an empirical modified Voce law
Voce (Italian for ''voice'') was a premium Mobile Virtual Network Operator (MVNO) using the AT&T GSM network sold by Neiman-Marcus and created by Japanese company Faith Communications. During the month of January 2008, ownership was transferred t ...
:
where
:
and is the hardening due to dislocation accumulation, is the contribution due to stage-IV hardening, () are constants, is the stress at zero strain hardening rate, is the saturation threshold stress for deformation at 0 K, is a constant, and is the maximum strain-rate. Note that the maximum strain-rate is usually limited to about /s.
PrestonâTonksâWallace flow stress model
The PrestonâTonksâWallace (PTW) model attempts to provide a model for the flow stress for extreme strain-rates (up to 1011/s) and temperatures up to melt. A linear Voce hardening law is used in the model. The PTW flow stress is given by
:
with
:
where is a normalized work-hardening saturation stress, is the value of at 0K, is a normalized yield stress, is the hardening constant in the Voce hardening law, and is a dimensionless material parameter that modifies the Voce hardening law.
The saturation stress and the yield stress are given by
:
where is the value of close to the melt temperature, () are the values of at 0 K and close to melt, respectively, are material constants, , () are material parameters for the high strain-rate regime, and
:
where is the density, and is the atomic mass.
See also
* Viscoelasticity
* Bingham plastic
* Dashpot
* Creep (deformation)
* Plasticity (physics)
* Continuum mechanics
* Quasi-solid
References
{{Reflist, 2
Continuum mechanics
Plasticity (physics)