The present study investigates the effect of stress triaxiality on mechanical behavior and fracture of Ti-5Al-2.5Sn alloy in a practical relevant strain rate range from 0.1 to 1000 s−1. Tensile tests were carried out on flat smoothed and notched specimens using an Instron VHS 40/50-20 servo-hydraulic test machine. High-speed video registration was conducted by Phantom 711 Camera. Strain fields on the specimen gauge area were investigated by the digital image correlation method (DIC). The fracture surface relief was studied using digital microscope Keyence VHX-600D. Stress and strain fields during testing of the Ti-5Al-2.5Sn alloy were analyzed by the numerical simulation method. The evolution of strain fields at the investigated loading condition indicates that large plastic deformation occurs in localization bands. The alloy undergoes fracture governing by damage nucleation, growth, and coalescence in the localized plastic strain bands oriented along the maximum shear stresses. Results confirm that the fracture of near alpha titanium alloys has ductile behavior at strain rates from 0.1 to 1000 s−1, stress triaxiality parameter 0.33 < η < 0.6, and temperature close to 295 K.
Bioinert metals are used for medical implants and in some industrial applications. This study was performed to detect and analyze peculiarities that appear in the temperature distributions during quasi-static tensile testing of bioinert alloys. These alloys include VT1-0 titanium, Zr-1%Nb and Ti-45%Nb in both coarse-grain (CG) and ultrafine-grain (UFG) states. The crystal structure, as well as the crystal domain and grain sizes of these alloys in the UFG state, may be different from the CG versions and identifying the thermal signatures that occur during their deformation and fracture is of interest, as it may lead to an understanding of physical processes that occur during loading. By comparing the surface temperature distributions of specimens undergoing deformation under tensile loading to the distributions at maximum temperatures it was found that the observed differences depend on the alloy type, the alloy structural state and the thermal properties of structural defects in the specimen. Macro-defects were found in some specimens of VT1-0 titanium, Zr-1Nb and Ti-45Nb alloys in both the CG and UFG states. The average tensile strength of specimens containing defects was lower than that of specimens with no defects. Infrared thermography documents change in the thermal patterns of specimens as they are deformed under tensile loading and when the load stops changing or the specimen breaks.
539.5 V. V. Skripnyak, and M. V. KorobenkovComputer simulation is used to investigate the deformation and damage processes taking place in brittle porous oxide ceramics under intense dynamic loading. The pore structure is shown to substantially affect the size of the fragments and the strength of the materials. In porous ceramics subjected to shock loading, deformation is localized in mesoscopic bands having characteristic orientations along, across, and at ~45º to the direction of propagation of the shock wave front. The localized-deformation bands may be transformed into macroscopic cracks. A method is proposed for a theoretical estimation of the effective elastic moduli of ceramics with pore structure without resorting to well-known hypotheses for the relation between elastic moduli and porosity of the materials.
Predictions on the mechanical behavior of metals and alloys with a hexagonal close-packed (HCP) lattice under dynamic influences in a wide range of temperatures are in demand for solving a wide range of applied problems. This article presents new results of numerical simulation showing the general similarity of the mechanical behavior of HCP titanium, zirconium, hafnium, and beryllium alloys under dynamic loadings in a wide range of temperatures. These alloys belong to the important isomechanical subgroup of HCP alloys. A model for numerical simulation of mechanical behavior of HCP alloys under dynamic loadings in a wide temperature range was proposed. The model takes into account the change in contributions to the flow stress from the mechanisms of twinning and dislocation slip in the considered subgroup of HCP alloys. A kinetic damage model was adopted to describe the damage evolution under complex stress conditions and under dynamic loading. Thus, it was possible to increase the accuracy of predicting the dynamic fracture under tensile loads including the spall fracture.
Abstract. Inelastic deformation and damage at the mesoscale level of ultrafine grained (UFG) light alloys with distribution of grain size were investigated in wide loading conditions by experimental and computer simulation methods. The computational multiscale models of representative volume element (RVE) with the unimodal and bimodal grain size distributions were developed using the data of structure researches aluminum and magnesium UFG alloys. The critical fracture stress of UFG alloys on mesoscale level depends on relative volumes of coarse grains. Microcracks nucleation at quasi-static and dynamic loading is associated with strain localization in UFG partial volumes with bimodal grain size distribution. Microcracks arise in the vicinity of coarse and ultrafine grains boundaries. It is revealed that the occurrence of bimodal grain size distributions causes the increasing of UFG alloys ductility, but decreasing of the tensile strength.
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