J Res Natl Inst Stand Technol
October 2021
The National Institute of Standards and Technology (NIST) developed an experimental technique to measure the dynamic flow stress of metals under rapid heating to study their time-dependent plastic response when heating times are short enough to interrupt or bypass thermally driven microstructural evolution. Such conditions may exist as chips are formed in the machining process. Measurements of American Iron and Steel Institute1045 steel behavior up to 1000 °C showed complex thermal softening due to dynamic strain aging effects and the diffusion-limited austenite transformation process beginning at the A1 temperature (712 °C).
View Article and Find Full Text PDFA computational framework is proposed that enables the integration of experimental and computational data, a variety of user-selected models, and a computer algorithm to direct a design optimization. To demonstrate this framework, a sample design of a ternary Ni-Al-Cr alloy with a high work-to-necking ratio is presented. This design example illustrates how CALPHAD phase-based, composition and temperature-dependent phase equilibria calculations and precipitation models are coupled with models for elastic and plastic deformation to calculate the stress-strain curves.
View Article and Find Full Text PDF