Shear banding is a plastic flow instability with highly undesirable consequences for metals processing. While band characteristics have been well studied, general methods to control shear bands are presently lacking. Here, we use high-speed imaging and micro-marker analysis of flow in cutting to reveal the common fundamental mechanism underlying shear banding in metals. The flow unfolds in two distinct phases: an initiation phase followed by a viscous sliding phase in which most of the straining occurs. We show that the second sliding phase is well described by a simple model of two identical fluids being sheared across their interface. The equivalent shear band viscosity computed by fitting the model to experimental displacement profiles is very close in value to typical liquid metal viscosities. The observation of similar displacement profiles across different metals shows that specific microstructure details do not affect the second phase. This also suggests that the principal role of the initiation phase is to generate a weak interface that is susceptible to localized deformation. Importantly, by constraining the sliding phase, we demonstrate a material-agnostic method-passive geometric flow control-that effects complete band suppression in systems which otherwise fail via shear banding.
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http://dx.doi.org/10.1098/rspa.2016.0167 | DOI Listing |
Materials (Basel)
October 2024
Laboratory of Manufacturing Technology, School of Mechanical Engineering, National Technical University of Athens, Heroon Polytechniou 9, 15780 Athens, Greece.
This work studies numerically the development of adiabatic shear banding (ASB) during high strain-rate compression of AISI 1045 steel. Plane strain and cylindrical axisymmetric compressions are simulated in LS-DYNA, considering rectangular and cylindrical steel samples, respectively. Also, a parametric analysis in height-to-base ratio is conducted in order to evaluate the effect of geometry and dimensional ratio of the sample on ASB formation.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFJ Chem Phys
November 2024
Université Paris-Saclay, CEA, Service de Recherche en Corrosion et Comportement des Matériaux, F-91191 Gif-sur-Yvette, France.
The elastic moduli and mechanical properties at the onset of crack in nanocrystalline and nanoporous (Ni, Fe)Cr2O4 compounds with a spinel structure are investigated by molecular dynamics simulations. The polycrystalline structures generated contain nanograins from 2.5 to 30 nm in diameter.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFMaterials (Basel)
September 2024
China Ordnance Industrial Standardization Research Institute, Beijing 100089, China.
Ti-based bulk metallic glass composites (BMGMCs) containing an formed metastable β phase normally exhibit enhanced plasticity attributed to induced phase transformation or twinning. However, the underlying deformation micromechanism remains controversial. This study investigates a novel deformation mechanism of Ti-based BMGMCs with a composition of TiZrCuNbNiBe (at%).
View Article and Find Full Text PDFPolymers (Basel)
August 2024
Department of Chemical Engineering, Biotechnology and Materials, Faculty of Engineering, Ariel University, Ariel 40700, Israel.
The decades-long paradigm of continuous and perpetual lamellar twisting constituting banded spherulites has been found to be inconsistent with several recent studies showing discontinuity regions between consecutive bands, for which, however, no explanation has been found. The present research demonstrates, in three different semicrystalline polymers (HDPE, PEG10000 and Pluronic F-127), that sequential transcrystallinity is the predominant mechanism of banded spherulite formation, heterogeneously nucleated on intermittent self-shear-oriented amorphous layers excluded during the crystals' growth. It is hereby demonstrated that a transcrystalline layer can be nucleated on amorphous self-shear-oriented polymer chains in the melt, by a local melt flow in the bulk or in contact with any interface-even in contact with the interface with air, e.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFSoft Matter
September 2024
Micro/Bio/Nanofluidics Unit, Okinawa Institute of Science and Technology Graduate University, Onna-son, Kunigami-gun, Okinawa 904-0495, Japan.
We present a comprehensive investigation combining numerical simulations with experimental validation, focusing on the creeping flow behavior of a shear-banding, viscoelastic wormlike micellar (WLM) solution over concavities with various depths () and lengths (). The fluid is modeled using the diffusive Giesekus model, with model parameters set to quantitatively describe the shear rheology of a 100 : 60 mM cetylpyridinium chloride:sodium salicylate aqueous WLM solution used for the experimental validation. We observe a transition from "cavity flow" to "expansion-contraction flow" as the length exceeds the sum of depth and channel width .
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