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  • About
  • The Global ETD Search service is a free service for researchers to find electronic theses and dissertations. This service is provided by the Networked Digital Library of Theses and Dissertations.
    Our metadata is collected from universities around the world. If you manage a university/consortium/country archive and want to be added, details can be found on the NDLTD website.
1

Characterisation of the high strain rate deformation behaviour of α-β titanium alloys at near-transus temperature

Bonfils, Laure January 2017 (has links)
The aim of this thesis is to provide microstructural and mechanical characterisation of α-β titanium alloys exposed to a range of thermo-mechanical conditions, in particular under-going high rate deformation at elevated temperatures, representative of the Linear Friction Welding (LFW) manufacturing process. Three α-β titanium alloys provided by Rolls-Royce are studied: Ti-64 blade, disc and Ti-6246 disc. Ti-64 and Ti-6246 show complex deformation behaviour with strain, strain rate and temperature, especially near the transus temperature, where the low temperature α phase is transformed into the high temperature β phase. The microstructure and mechanical properties evolve in an interconnected fashion, and understanding this mutual influence is necessary to better predict the behaviour of these alloys. Characterisation of the mechanical properties was performed through uniaxial compression tests at strain rates from 0.001 to 3000 s<sup>-1</sup>, using an Instron screw-driven machine at quasi-static rates, a servo-hydraulic machine at medium rates and a Split-Hopkinson Pressure Bar and a drop-weight tower at high strain rates. The tests were performed over a range of temperatures from room temperature to 1300 °C. The main focus was on high strain rate and high temperature tests, with the development of a gravity driven direct impact Hopkinson bar, referred as a drop-weight system, which is intended to evaluate the mechanical response of metals to high strain rate loading at temperatures up to c. 1300 °C. The design and principles of operation of the system are presented, along with calibration and validation data. Preliminary tests were performed on stock Ti-64, heated at two rates: 1 and 20 °C s<sup>-1</sup>. The evolution of the mechanical properties was analysed, focussing on the strain rate, temperature and phases dependencies. Characterisation of the microstructure was realised by performing interrupted compression tests, first at room temperature, three plastic strains, 4%, 10% and 20%, and two different strain rates, 0.001 and 2000 s<sup>-1</sup>; then at 4% plastic strain, a strain rate of 2000 s<sup>-1</sup> and three elevated temperatures, 700, 900 and 1100 °C. A better understanding of the microstructure evolution with strain, strain rates and temperature, including the macrotexture and microtexture of the specimens, was obtained using Electron Backscatter Diffraction (EBSD) to characterise the texture of the undeformed and deformed materials. The better understanding of the flow stress and microstructural evolution of both Ti-64 and its individual α and β phases with various strain rates and temperatures is intended to be used in the development of more accurate models representing the behaviour of these alloys. Predicting the microstructure evolution and then the mechanical properties of a material is essential to optimise the final mechanical properties of the alloys when welded by manufacturing processes such as the LFW process.
2

Effect Of Processing And Test Variables On The Deformation Characteristics Of Tantalum

Bandyopadhyay, Hindol 08 1900 (has links) (PDF)
The dependence of flow stress of body centered cubic metals on variables such as strain rate, temperature, strain and microstructural is a research area of continued interest. Recently, there has been renewed interest in deformation of fine grained BCC metals, which display characteristics that are different from their coarse-grained counterparts. Deformation mechanisms, strain-rate and temperature dependence, and strain hardening characteristics of fine-grained BCC metals are not well understood. The aim of this thesis is to understand the effect of strain-rate, temperature, strain and microstructure (i.e., grain size) on the mechanical response of poly¬crystalline tantalum. Among the topics addressed were constitutive modeling of flow stress, understanding the microstructural origins of strain hardening, and characterizing the effect of severe plastic deformation (SPD) on microstructure and mechanical properties. Rolling and equal-channel angular pressing (ECAP) were among the processing techniques employed. Mechanical testing was conducted over a range of temperatures and strain rates, and this was supported by a slew of microscopic characterization methods. It was found that the strain hardening response depends on microstructural evolution at different strain rates. Results indicate that the same thermally activated mechanisms operate in both as-received and processed material and this was found to be the overcoming of Peierls barriers via a double-kink mechanism. Lastly, it was found that the low strain rate sensitivity of SPD processed material was not due to fine grain size, but instead due to high internals stresses.
3

Modeling of High Strain Rate Compression of Austenitic Shape Memory Alloys

Yu, Hao 12 1900 (has links)
Shape memory alloys (SMAs) exhibit the ability to absorb large dynamic loads and, therefore, are excellent candidates for structural components where impact loading is expected. Compared to the large amount of research on the shape memory effect and/or pseudoelasticity of polycrystalline SMAs under quasi-static loading conditions, studies on dynamic loading are limited. Experimental research shows an apparent difference between the quasi-static and high strain rate deformation of SMAs. Research reveals that the martensitic phase transformation is strain rate sensitive. The mechanism for the martensitic phase transformation in SMAs during high strain rate deformation is still unclear. Many of the existing high strain rate models assume that the latent heat generated during deformation contributes to the change in the stress-strain behavior during dynamic loading, which is insufficient to explain the large stress observed during phase transformation under high strain rate deformation. Meanwhile, the relationship between the phase front velocity and strain rate has been studied. In this dissertation, a new resistance to phase transformation during high strain rate deformation is discussed and the relationship between the driving force for phase transformation and phase front velocity is established. With consideration of the newly defined resistance to phase transformation, a new model for phase transformation of SMAs during high strain rate deformation is presented and validated based on experimental results from an austenitic NiTi SMA. Stress, strain, and martensitic volume fraction distribution during high strain rate deformation are simulated using finite element analysis software ABAQUS/standard. For the first time, this dissertation presents a theoretical study of the microscopic band structure during high strain rate compressive deformation. The microscopic transformation band is generated by the phase front and leads to minor fluctuations in sample deformation. The strain rate effect on phase transformation is studied using the model. Both the starting stress for transformation and the slope of the stress-strain curve during phase transformation increase with increasing strain rate.
4

Modeling defect structure evolution in spent nuclear fuel container materials

Delandar, Arash Hosseinzadeh January 2017 (has links)
Materials intended for disposal of spent nuclear fuel require a particular combination of physical and chemical properties. The driving forces and mechanisms underlying the material’s behavior must be scientifically understood in order to enable modeling at the relevant time- and length-scales. The processes that determine the mechanical behavior of copper canisters and iron inserts, as well as the evolution of their mechanical properties, are strongly dependent on the properties of various defects in the bulk copper and iron alloys. The first part of the present thesis deals with precipitation in the cast iron insert. A nodular cast iron insert will be used as the inner container of the spent nuclear fuel. Precipitation is investigated by computing effective interaction energies for point defect pairs (solute–solute and vacancy–solute) in bcc iron using first-principles calculations. The main considered impurities in the iron matrix include 3sp (Si, P, S) and 3d (Cr, Mn, Ni, Cu) solute elements. By computing interaction energies possibility of formation of different second phase particles such as late blooming phases (LBPs) in the cast iron insert is evaluated. The second part is devoted to the fundamentals of dislocations and their role in plastic deformation of metals. Deformation of single-crystal copper under high strain rates is simulated by employing dislocation dynamics (DD) method to examine the effect of strain rate on mechanical properties as well as dislocation microstructure development. Creep deformation of copper canister at low temperatures is studied. The copper canister will be used in the long-term storage of spent nuclear fuel as the outer shell of the waste package to provide corrosion protection. A glide rate is derived based on the assumption that at low temperatures it is controlled by the climb rate of jogs on the dislocations. Using DD simulation creep deformation of copper at low temperatures is modeled by taking glide but not climb into account. Moreover, effective stresses acting on dislocations are computed using the data extracted from DD simulations. / <p>QC 20170428</p>
5

Mechanochemical Reactions and Strengthening in Epoxy-Cast Aluminum Iron-Oxide Mixtures

Ferranti, Louis, Jr. 02 November 2007 (has links)
This investigation is focused on the understanding of mechanical and chemical reaction behaviors of stoichiometric mixtures of nano- and micro-scale aluminum and hematite (Fe2O3) powders dispersed in epoxy. Epoxy-cast Al+Fe2O3 thermite composites are an example of a structural energetic material that can simultaneously release energy while providing structural strength. The structural and energetic response of this material system is investigated by characterizing the mechanical behavior under high-strain rate and shock loading conditions. The mechanical response and reaction behavior are closely interlinked through deformation characteristics. It is, therefore, desirable to understand the deformation behavior up to and beyond failure and establish the necessary stress and strain states required for initiating chemical reactions. The composite s behavior has been altered by changing two main processing parameters; the reactants particle size and the relative volume fraction of the epoxy matrix. This study also establishes processing techniques necessary for incorporating nanometric-scale reactants into energetic material systems. The mechanochemical behavior of epoxy-cast Al+Fe2O3 composites and the influence of epoxy volume fraction have been evaluated for a variety of loading conditions over a broad range of strain rates, which include low-strain rate or quasistatic loading experiments (10-4 to 10-2 1/s), medium-strain rate Charpy and Taylor impacts (103 to 104 1/s), and high-strain rate parallel-plate impacts (105 to 106 1/s). In general, structural strength and toughness have been observed to improve as the volume fraction of epoxy decreases, regardless of the loading strain rate regime explored. Hugoniot experiments show damage occurring at approximately the same critical impact stress for compositions prepared with significantly different volume fractions of the epoxy binder phase. Additionally, Taylor impact experiments have indicated evidence for strain-induced chemical reactions, which subject the composite to large shear accompanied by temperature increase and associated softening, preceding these reactions. Overall, the work aims to establish an understanding of the microstructural influence on mechanical behavior and chemical reactivity exhibited by epoxy-cast Al+Fe2O3 materials when exposed to high stress and high-strain loading conditions. The understanding of fundamental aspects and the results of impact experiment measurements provide information needed for the design of structural energetic materials.
6

Ανάπτυξη αριθμητικού προτύπου για την προσομοίωση της σφυρηλάτησης με βολή σωματιδίων / Numerical simulation of shot peeining process

Μυλωνάς, Γεώργιος 04 February 2013 (has links)
Η σφυρηλάτηση με βολή σωματιδίων (shot peening) είναι μία επιφανειακή κατεργασία που πραγματοποιείται με σκοπό την αύξηση της αντοχής μεταλλικών υλικών και εφαρμόζεται στο τελευταίο στάδιο της γραμμής παραγωγής. Η αύξηση της αντοχής επιτυγχάνεται με την ανάπτυξη θλιπτικών παραμενουσών τάσεων κοντά στην επιφάνεια του υλικού έπειτα από την κρούση σωματιδίων με υψηλές ταχύτητες. Η ανάπτυξη θλιπτικών παραμενουσών τάσεων αυξάνει την αντοχή σε κόπωση, σε εργοδιάβρωση, καθώς και σε άλλες μηχανικές καταπονήσεις και επιτρέπει την μείωση του βάρους σχεδιάζοντας διατομές με μικρότερο πάχος. Στην παρούσα Διδακτορική Διατριβή παρουσιάζεται μια ολοκληρωμένη αριθμητική προσομοίωση της κατεργασίας και εξετάζεται η μηχανική συμπεριφορά των υπό κατεργασία υλικών σε υψηλούς ρυθμούς καταπόνησης. Συγκεκριμένα η μεθοδολογία που αναπτύσσεται περιλαμβάνει την ανάπτυξη ενός αριθμητικού προτύπου για την προσομοίωση της κατεργασίας της σφυρηλάτησης με βολή σωματιδίων και τον υπολογισμό των αποτελεσμάτων της στο υλικό. Τα βήματα που ακολουθηθήκαν για την ανάπτυξη του αριθμητικού προτύπου είναι, α) ο χαρακτηρισμός του κράματος αλουμινίου 7449-Τ7651 σε υψηλούς ρυθμούς καταπόνησης μέσω της πειραματικής διάταξης Split Hopkinson Bar που σχεδιάστηκε και κατασκευάστηκε στο Εργαστήριο Τεχνολογίας και Αντοχής Υλικών, β) η ανάπτυξη βοηθητικών επιμέρους αριθμητικών μοντέλων, γ) η ανάπτυξη κινηματικών μοντέλων προσομοίωσης της ροής των σωματιδίων, δ) η ανάπτυξη κριτηρίων και η εφαρμογή τους για τον υπολογισμό του ελαχίστου απαιτούμενου αριθμού σωματιδίων για την προσομοίωση, καθώς και των θέσεων κρούσης, ε) η ανάπτυξη ενός αριθμητικού προτύπου πλήρους γεωμετρίας της πλάκας για την κρούση του απαιτούμενου αριθμού σωματιδίων και στ) η πειραματική επαλήθευση του αριθμητικού προτύπου. Με το αριθμητικό πρότυπο που αναπτύχτηκε υπολογίστηκαν τα αποτελέσματα της κατεργασίας της σφυρηλάτησης με βολή σωματιδίων στο υλικό και επιβεβαιώθηκαν μέσω συγκρίσεων με αντίστοιχα πειραματικά αποτελέσματα. Αποτελέσματα της κατεργασίας εκτός από τις παραμένουσες τάσεις αποτελούν και η πλαστική παραμόρφωση, η σκληρότητα, η επιφανειακή τραχύτητα και κατ' επέκταση ο συντελεστής έντασης τάσης. Στη συνέχεια, πραγματοποιήθηκε μια παραμετρική μελέτη για την επίδραση της διαμέτρου, της ταχύτητας και της γωνίας κρούσης στην ανάπτυξη των παραμενουσών τάσεων. Επίσης το αριθμητικό πρότυπο επαληθεύτηκε και για άλλα μεταλλικά υλικά. / Shot peening is a surface treatment process that is performed to increase the strength of metallic materials and is applied to the last stage of the production line (post manufacturing process). The increase in strength is achieved by the developed compressive residual stresses near the surface and the subsurface of the treated material after the impact of small diameter particles with high speeds. The developed compressive residual stresses increases the fatigue strength, the mechanical performance of the component under stress corrosion cracking (SCC), under higher stresses and allows lighter structure design. This PhD thesis presents a comprehensive numerical simulation of the Shot peening process and includes a comprehensive study of the mechanical behaviour of treated materials under high strain rates of deformation. Specifically, the methodology developed includes the development of a comprehensive numerical model to simulate Shot peening treatment and calculate the results on the treated material. The steps followed for the development of the numerical model are: a) the characterization of the Aluminium alloy 7449-T7651 at high strain rates using a Split Hopkinson Bar apparatus designed and built at the Laboratory of Technology and Strength of Materials, b) the development of auxiliary partial numerical models, c) the development of a kinematic simulation model for the analysis of the flow particles, d) the development and the application of two criteria for the successful calculation of the minimum number of particles that required for the simulation, and the impact positions e) the development of a numerical model describing the full plate geometry for the impact of the minimum number of particles required and f) the experimental verification of the numerical model. The process outcomes and results on the treated material were calculated by the numerical model developed. The numerical results that were calculated for the threaded material were confirmed by comparison with experimental results. Treatment results include the residual stresses, the plastic deformation, hardness, surface roughness, and hence the stress concentration factor. A parametric study on the effect of the diameter, speed and angle of impact to the development of residual stresses was performed. The numerical model was also verified for a number of other metallic materials.
7

Numerical Modeling of Plasticity in FCC Crystalline Materials Using Discrete Dislocation Dynamics

Hosseinzadeh Delandar, Arash January 2015 (has links)
Plasticity in crystalline solids is controlled by the microscopic line defects known as “dislocations”. Decisive role of dislocations in crystal plasticity in addition to fundamentals of plastic deformation are presented in the current thesis work. Moreover, major features of numerical modeling method “Discrete Dislocation Dynamics (DDD)” technique are described to elucidate a powerful computational method used in simulation of crystal plasticity. First part of the work is focused on the investigation of strain rate effect on the dynamic deformation of crystalline solids. Single crystal copper is chosen as a model crystal and discrete dislocation dynamics method is used to perform numerical uniaxial tensile test on the single crystal at various high strain rates. Twenty four straight dislocations of mixed character are randomly distributed inside a model crystal with an edge length of 1 µm subjected to periodic boundary conditions. Loading of the model crystal with the considered initial dislocation microstructure at constant strain rates ranging from 103 to 105s1 leads to a significant strain rate sensitivity of the plastic flow. In addition to the flow stress, microstructure evolution of the sample crystal demonstrates a considerable strain rate dependency. Furthermore, strain rate affects the strain induce microstructure heterogeneity such that more heterogeneous microstructure emerges as strain rate increases. Anisotropic characteristic of plasticity in single crystals is investigated in the second part of the study. Copper single crystal is selected to perform numerical tensile tests on the model crystal along two different loading directions of [001] and [111] at two high strain rates. Effect of loading orientation on the macroscopic behavior along with microstructure evolution of the model crystal is examined using DDD method. Investigation of dynamic response of single crystal to the mechanical loading demonstrates a substantial effect of loading orientation on the flow stress. Furthermore, plastic anisotropy is observed in dislocation density evolution such that more dislocations are generated as straining direction of single crystal is changed from [001] to [111] axis. Likewise, strain induced microstructure heterogeneity displays the effect of loading direction such that more heterogeneous microstructure evolve as single crystal is loaded along [111] direction. Formation of slip bands and consequently localization of plastic deformation are detected as model crystal is loaded along both directions. / <p>QC 20151015</p>

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