TY - JOUR
T1 - Multiaxial constitutive model accounting for the strength-differential in Inconel 718
AU - Iyer, Saiganesh K.
AU - Lissenden, Cliff J.
N1 - Funding Information:
We gratefully acknowledge the support of the NASA Glenn Research Center, grant NCC3-597. Thanks especially to B.A. Lerch for preparing the laboratory for these experiments and actually conducting some of them. Thanks to T.E. Wilt for help with the COMPARE program and to S.M. Arnold for discussions regarding the modeling work.
PY - 2003/12
Y1 - 2003/12
N2 - The nickel-base alloy Inconel 718 exhibits a strength-differential, that is, a different plastic flow behavior in uniaxial tension and uniaxial compression. A phenomenological viscoplastic model founded on thermodynamics has been extended for material behavior that deviates from classical metal plasticity by including all three stress invariants in the threshold function. The model can predict plastic flow in isotropic materials with or without a flow stress asymmetry as well as with or without pressure dependence. Viscoplastic material parameters have been fit to pure shear, uniaxial tension, and uniaxial compression experimental results at 650°°C. Threshold function material parameters have been fit to the strength-differential. Four classes of threshold functions have been considered and nonproportional loading of hollow tubes, such as shear strain followed by axial strain, has been used to select the most applicable class of threshold function for the multiaxial model as applied to Inconel 718 at 650 °C. These nonproportional load paths containing corners provide a rigorous test of a plasticity model, whether it is time-dependent or not. A J2J3 class model, where J2 and J3 are the second and third effective deviatoric stress invariants, was found to agree the best with the experimental results.
AB - The nickel-base alloy Inconel 718 exhibits a strength-differential, that is, a different plastic flow behavior in uniaxial tension and uniaxial compression. A phenomenological viscoplastic model founded on thermodynamics has been extended for material behavior that deviates from classical metal plasticity by including all three stress invariants in the threshold function. The model can predict plastic flow in isotropic materials with or without a flow stress asymmetry as well as with or without pressure dependence. Viscoplastic material parameters have been fit to pure shear, uniaxial tension, and uniaxial compression experimental results at 650°°C. Threshold function material parameters have been fit to the strength-differential. Four classes of threshold functions have been considered and nonproportional loading of hollow tubes, such as shear strain followed by axial strain, has been used to select the most applicable class of threshold function for the multiaxial model as applied to Inconel 718 at 650 °C. These nonproportional load paths containing corners provide a rigorous test of a plasticity model, whether it is time-dependent or not. A J2J3 class model, where J2 and J3 are the second and third effective deviatoric stress invariants, was found to agree the best with the experimental results.
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U2 - 10.1016/S0749-6419(03)00059-7
DO - 10.1016/S0749-6419(03)00059-7
M3 - Article
AN - SCOPUS:0141761211
SN - 0749-6419
VL - 19
SP - 2055
EP - 2081
JO - International journal of plasticity
JF - International journal of plasticity
IS - 12 SPEC ISS.
ER -