Title: PLASTIC DEFORMATION
1PLASTIC DEFORMATION
- Mechanisms of Plastic Deformation
- The Uniaxial Tension Test
- Mechanisms of Plastic Deformation
Mechanical Metallurgy George E Dieter
McGraw-Hill Book Company, London (1988)
2If failure is considered as change in desired
performance- which could involve changes in
properties and/or shape then failure can occur
by many mechanisms as below.
Mechanisms / Methods by which a can Material can
FAIL
Elastic deformation
Chemical /Electro-chemicaldegradation
Creep
Physicaldegradation
Fatigue
Plastic deformation
Fracture
Microstructuralchanges
Twinning
Wear
Slip
Twinning
Erosion
Corrosion
Phase transformations
Oxidation
Grain growth
Particle coarsening
Beyond a certain limit
3- Plastic deformation in the broadest sense means
permanent deformation in the absence of external
constraints (forces, displacements) (i.e.
external constraints are removed). - Plastic deformation of crystalline materials
takes place by mechanisms which are very
different from that for amorphous materials
(glasses). The current chapter will focus on
plastic deformation of crystalline materials.
Glasses deform by shear banding etc. below the
glass transition temperature (Tg) and by flow
above Tg. - Though plasticity by slip is the most important
mechanism of plastic deformation, there are other
mechanisms as well. Many of these mechanisms may
act in conjunction/parallel to give rise to the
observed plastic deformation.
Plastic Deformation in Crystalline Materials
Slip(Dislocation motion)
Twinning
Phase Transformation
Creep Mechanisms
Grain boundary sliding
Other Mechanisms
Vacancy diffusion
Grain rotation
Dislocation climb
Note Plastic deformation in amorphous materials
occur by other mechanisms including flow
(viscous fluid) and shear banding
4Common types of deformation
Review
- Tension/Compression
- Bending
- Shear
- Torsion
Bending
Deformed configuration
Torsion
Shear
Tension
Compression
Note modes of deformation in other contexts will
be defined in the topic on plasticity
5Peak ahead
- In addition to the modes of deformation
considered before the following modes can be
defined w.r.t fracture. - Fracture can be cause by the propagation of a
pre-existing crack (e.g. the notches shown in the
figures below) or by the nucleation of a crack
during deformation followed by its propagation. - In fracture the elastic energy stored in the
material is used for the creation of new surfaces
(when the crack nucleates/propagates)
Mode I
ModesofDeformation
Mode II
Mode III
6The Uniaxial Tension Test (UTT)
- One of the simplest test which can performed to
evaluate the mechanical properties of a material
is the Uniaxial Tension Test. - This is typically performed on a cylindrical
specimen with a standard gauge length. (At
constant temperature and strain rate). - The test involves pulling a material with
increasing load (force) and noting the elongation
(displacement) of the specimen. - Data acquired from such a test can be plotted as
(i) load-stroke (raw data), (ii) engineering
stress- engineering strain, (iii) true stress-
true strain. (next slide). - It is convenient to use Engineering Stress (s)
and Engineering Strain (e) as defined below ? as
we can divide the load and change in length by
constant quantities (A0 and L0). Subscripts 0
refer to initial values and i to instantaneous
values. - But there are problems with the use of s and
e (as outlined in the coming slides) and hence
we define True Stress (?) and True Strain (?)
(wherein we use instantaneous values of length
and area). - Though this is simple test to conduct and a
wealth of information about the mechanical
behaviour of a material can be obtained (Modulus
of elasticity, ductility etc.) ? However, it must
be cautioned that this data should be used with
caution under other states of stress.
0 ? initial
Note quantities obtained by performing an
Uniaxial Tension Test are valid only under
uniaxial state of stress
Subscript
i ? instantaneous
7The Tensile Stress-Strain Curve
Tensile specimen
Gauge Length ? L0
Possible axes
Initial cross sectional area ? A0
Important Note
We shall assume cylindrical specimens (unless
otherwise stated)
8Problem with engineering Stress (s) and Strain
(e)!!
Consider the following sequence of deformations
L0
1
e1?2 1
2
2L0
e1?3 0
?e1?2 e2?3 ½
e2?3 ?? ½
3
L0
It is clear that from stage 1 ? 3 there is no
strain But the decomposition of the process into
1 ? 2 2 ? 3 gives a net strain of ½ ? Clearly
there is a problem with the use (definition) of
Engineering strain ? Hence, a quantity known as
True Strain is preferred (along with True
Stress) ? as defined in the next slide.
9True Stress (?) and Strain (?)
- The definitions of true stress and true strain
are based on instantaneous values of area (Ai)
and length (Li).
10Same sequence of deformations considered before
L0
1
? 1?2 Ln(2)
2
2L0
?1?3 0
?? 1?2 ? 2?3 0
? 2?3 ?? Ln(2)
3
L0
With true strain things turn out the way they
should!
11Schematic s-e and ?-? curves
- These are simplified schematics which are close
to the curves obtained for some metallic
materials like Al, Cu etc. (polycrystalline
materials at room temperature). - Many materials (e.g. steel) may have curves which
are qualitatively very different from these
schematics. - Most ceramics are brittle with very little
plastic deformation. - Even these diagrams are not to scale as the
strain at yield is 0.001 (eelastic 103)E is
measured in GPa and ?y in MPa ? thus giving this
small strains ? the linear portion is
practically vertical and stuck to the Y-axis
(when efracture and eelastic is drawn to the same
scale).
Note the increasing stress required for continued
plastic deformation
Schematics not to scale
- Information gained from the test
- Youngs modulus
- Yield stress (or proof stress)
- Ultimate Tensile Stress (UTS)
- Fracture stress
- UTS- Ultimate Tensile Strength
- Subscripts y- yield, F,f- fracture,
- u- uniform (for strain)/ultimate (for stress)
Neck
Points and regions of the curves are explained in
the next slide
12Sequence of events during the tension test
- O ? unloaded specimen
- OY ? Elastic ? Linear Region in the plot
(macroscopic linear elastic region) - Y ? macroscopic yield point (there are many
measures of yielding as discussed later)Occurs
due to collective motion of many dislocations. - YF ? Elastic Plastic regime ? If specimen is
unloaded from any point in this region, it will
unload parallel to OY and the elastic strain
would be recovered. Actually, more strain will be
recovered than unloading from Y (and hence in
some sense in the region YF the sample is more
elastic than in the elastic region OY).? In
this region the material strain hardens ? flow
stress increases with strain.? This region can
further be split into YN and NF as below. - YN ? Stable region with uniform deformation along
the gauge length - N ? Instability in tension ? Onset of necking
True condition of uniaxiality broken ? onset of
triaxial state of stress (loading remains
uniaxial but the state of stress in the
cylindrical specimen is not). - NF ? most of the deformation is localized at the
neck? Specimen in a triaxial state of stress - F ? Fracture of specimen (many polycrystalline
materials like Al show cup and cone fracture)
- Notes
- In the ?-? plot there is no distinct point N and
there is no drop in load (as instantaneous area
has been taken into account in the definition of
?) in the elastic plastic regime (YF) - The stress is monotonically increasing in the
region YF ? true indicator of strain hardening
13Comparison between Engineering and True
quantities
- In engineering stress since we are dividing by a
constant number A0 (and there is a local
reduction in area around the neck) - Engineering and true values are related by
the equations as below. - At low strains (in the uniaxial tension test)
either of the values work fine. - As we shall see that during the tension test
localized plastic deformation occurs after some
strain (called necking). This leads to
inhomogeneity in the stress across the length of
the sample and under such circumstances true
stress should be used.
Valid till necking starts
Comparison between true strain and engineering strain Comparison between true strain and engineering strain Comparison between true strain and engineering strain Comparison between true strain and engineering strain Comparison between true strain and engineering strain Comparison between true strain and engineering strain Comparison between true strain and engineering strain Comparison between true strain and engineering strain Comparison between true strain and engineering strain
True strain (?) 0.01 0.10 0.20 0.50 1.0 2.0 3.0 4.0
Engineering strain (e) 0.01 0.105 0.22 0.65 1.72 6.39 19.09 53.6
Note that for strains of about 0.4, true and
engineering strains can be assumed to be equal.
At large strains the deviations between the
values are large.
14Where does Yielding start?
- Yielding can be defined in many contexts. ?
Truly speaking (microscopically) it is point at
which dislocations leave the crystal (grain) and
cause microscopic plastic deformation (of unit
b) ? this is best determined from microstrain
(106 ) experiments on single crystals. However,
in practical terms it is determined from the
stress-strain plot (by say an offset as described
below). - True elastic limit (microscopically and
macroscopically elastic ? where in there is not
even microscopic yielding) ? 106 OA portion
of the curve - Microscopically plastic but macroscopically
elastic ? AY portion of the curve - Proportional limit ? the point at which there is
a deviation from the straight line elastic
regime - Offset Yield Strength (proof stress) ? A curve is
drawn parallel to the elastic line at a given
strain like 0.2 ( 0.002) to determine the yield
strength.
- In some materials (e.g. pure annealed Cu, gray
cast iron etc.) the linear portion of the curve
may be limited and yield strength may arbitrarily
determined as the stress at some given strain
(say 0.005).
15Important Note
- ?y is yield stress in an uniaxial tension test
and should not be used in other states of stress
(other criteria of yield should be used for a
generalized state of stress). - Tresca and von Mices criterion are the two most
popular ones.
16What is meant by ductility?
- Slip is competing with other processes which can
lead to failure. - In simple terms a ductile material is one which
yields before failure (i.e. ?y lt ?f). - Ductility depends on the state of stress used
during deformation. - We can obtain an measure of the ductility of a
material from the uniaxial tension test as
follows (by putting together the fractured parts
to make the measurement)? Strain at fracture
(ef) (usually expressed as ), (often called
elongation, although it is a dimensionless
quantity)? Reduction in area at fracture (q)
(usually expressed as ) - q is a better measure of ductility as it does
not depend on the gauge length (L0) while, ef
depends on L0. Elongation/strain to necking
(uniform elongation) can also be used to avoid
the complication arising from necking.Also, q
is a more structure sensitive ductility
parameter. - Sometimes it is easier to visualize elongation as
a measure of ductility rather than a reduction in
area. For this the calculation has be based on a
very short gauge length in the necked region ?
called Zero-gauge-length elongation (e0). e0
can be calculated from q using constancy of
volume in plastic deformation (ALA0L0).
Note this is ductility in Uniaxial Tension Test
17Comparison between reduction in area versus
strain at fracture
- We had seen two measures of ductility? Strain
at fracture (ef) ? Reduction in area at fracture
(q) - We had also seen that these can be related
mathematically as - However, it should be noted that they represent
different aspects of material behaviour. - For reasonable gauge lengths, e is dominated by
uniform elongation prior to necking and thus is
dependent on the strain hardening capacity of the
material (more the strain hardening, more will be
the e). Main contribution to q (area based
calculation) comes from the necking process
(which is more geometry dependent). - Hence, reduction in area is not truly a
material property and has geometry dependence.
18What happens after necking?
- Following factors come in to picture due to
necking - Till necking the deformation is uniform along
the whole gauge length. - Till necking points on the ?-? plot lie to the
left and higher than the s-e plot (as below). - After the onset of necking deformation is
localized around the neck region. - Formulae used for conversion of e to ? and
s to ? cannot be used after the onset of
necking. - Triaxial state of stress develops and uniaxiality
condition assumed during the test breaks down. - Necking can be considered as an instability in
tension. - Hence, quantities calculated after the onset of
necking (like fracture stress, ?F) has to be
corrected for (i) triaxial state of stress, (ii)
correct cross sectional area.
Neck
Fractured surfaces
Fractured surfaces
19True values beyond necking
- Calculation of true strain beyond necking
- True strain values beyond necking can be
obtained by using the concept of
zero-gauge-length elongation (e0). This involves
measurement of instantaneous area.
Beyond necking
Note Further complications arise at strains
close to fracture as microvoid nucleation
growth take place and hence all formulations
based on continuum approach (e.g. volume
constancy) etc. are not valid anymore.
20True values beyond necking
Cotd..
- Calculation of true Stress beyond necking
- Neck acts like a diffuse notch. This produces a
triaxial state of stress (radial and transverse
components of stress exist in addition to the
longitudinal component) ? this raises the value
of the longitudinal stress required to case
plastic flow. - Using certain assumptions (as below) some
correction to the state of stress can be made
(given that the state of stress is triaxial, such
a correction should be viewed appropriately). - Assumptions used in the correction ? neck is
circular (radius R), ? von Mises criterion can
be used for yielding, ? strains are constant
across the neck. - The corrected uniaxial stress (?uniaxial) is
calculated from the stress from the experiment
(?expLoad/Alocal), using the formula as below.
The Correction
P.W. Bridgman, Trans. Am. Soc. Met. 32 (1944)
553.
21Fracture stress and fracture strain
- The tensile specimen fails by cup cone
fracture ? wherein outer regions fail by shear
and inner regions in tension. - Fracture strain (ef) is often used as a measure
of ductility.
- Calculation of fracture stress/strain
- To calculate true fracture stress (?F) we need
the area at fracture (which is often not readily
available and often the data reported for
fracture stress could be in error). - Further, this fracture stress has to be corrected
for triaxiality. - True strain at fracture can be calculated from
the areas as below.
22Unloading the specimen during the tension test
- If the specimen is unloaded beyond the yield
point (say point X in figure below), elastic
strain is recovered (while plastic strain is
not). The unloading path is XM. - The strain recovered ( ) is more than
that recovered if the specimen was to be unloaded
from Y ( ) ? i.e. in this sense the
material is more elastic in the plastic region
(in the presence of work hardening), than in the
elastic region! - If the specimen is reloaded it will follow the
reverse path and yielding will start at ?X.
Because of strain hardening the yield strength
of the specimen is higher.
Strain Hardening is also called work hardening
?The material becomes harder with plastic
deformation (on tensile loading the present
case) ? We will see later that strain hardening
is usually caused by multiplication of
dislocations.
If one is given a material which is at point
M, then the Yield stress of such a material
would be ?X (i.e. as we dont know the prior
history of the specimen loading, we would call
?X as yield stress of the specimen).
The blue part of the curve is also called the
flow stress
23Variables in plastic deformation
- In the tension experiment just described the
temperature (T) is usually kept constant and the
sample is pulled (between two crossheads of a
UTM) at a constant velocity. The crosshead
velocity can be converted to strain rate ( )
using the gauge length (L0) of the specimen. - At low temperatures (below the recrystallization
temperature of the material, T lt 0.4Tm) the
material hardens on plastic deformation (YF in
the ?-? plot ? known as work hardening or strain
hardening). The net strain is an important
parameter under such circumstances and the
material becomes a partial store of the
deformation energy provided. The energy is
essentially stored in the form of dislocations
and point defects. - If deformation is carried out at high
temperatures (above the recrystallization
temperature wherein, new strain free grains are
continuously forming as the deformation
proceeds), strain rate becomes the important
parameter instead of net strain.
Range of strain rates obtained in various experiments Range of strain rates obtained in various experiments
Test Range of strain rate (/s)
Creep tests 108 to 105
Quasi-static tension tests (in an UTM) 105 to 101
Dynamic tension tests 101 to 102
High strain rate tests using impact bars 102 to 104
Explosive loading using projectiles (shock tests) 104 to 108
24- In the ?-? plot the plastic stress and strain are
usually expressed by the expression given below.
Where, n is the strain hardening exponent and
K is the strength coefficient.
Usually expressed as (for ?plastic)
- Deviations from this behaviour often observed
(e.g. in Austenitic stainless steel) at low
strains (103) and/or at high strains (1.0).
Other forms of the power law equation are also
considered in literature (e.g.
). - An ideal plastic material (without strain
hardening) would begin to neck right at the onset
of yielding. At low temperatures (below
recrystallization temperature- less than about
0.5Tm) strain hardening is very important to
obtain good ductility. This can be understood
from the analysis of the results of the uniaxial
tension test. During tensile deformation
instability in the form of necking localizes
deformation to a small region (which now
experiences a triaxial state of stress). In the
presence of strain hardening the neck portion
(which has been strained more) hardens and the
deformation is spread to other regions, thus
increasing the ductility obtained.
- For an experiment done in shear on single
crystals the equivalent region to OY can further
be subdivided into ? True elastic strain
(microscopic) till the true elastic limit (?E)?
Onset of microscopic plastic deformation above a
stress of ?A.? For Mo a comparison of these
quantities is as follows ?E 0.5 MPa,
?A 5 MPa and ?0 (macroscopic yield stress in
shear) 50 MPa.
25Variables/parameters in mechanical testing
- Process parameters (characterized by parameters
inside the sample)? Mode of deformation, Sample
dimensions, Stress, Strain, Strain Rate,
Temperature etc. - Material parameters? Crystal structure,
Composition, Grain size, dislocation density, etc.
26Variables in plastic deformation
K ? strength coefficientn ? strain / work
hardening coefficient ? Cu and brass (n
0.5) can be given large plastic strain more
easily as compared to steels with n 0.15
When true strain is less than 1, the smaller
value of n dominates over a larger value of n
n and K for selected materials
Material n K (MPa)
Annealed Cu 0.54 320
Annealed Brass (70/30) 0.49 900
Annealed 0.5 C steel 0.26 530
0.6 carbon steel Quenched and Tempered (540?C) 0.10 1570
27- At high temperatures (above recrystallization
temperature) where strain rate is the important
parameter instead of strain, a power law equation
can be written as below between stress and strain
rate.
The effect of strain rate is compared by
performing tests to a constant strain
A ? a constantm ? index of strain rate
sensitivity ? If m 0 ? stress is independent
of strain rate (stress-strain curve would be
same for all strain rates) ? m 0.2 for common
metals ? If m ? (0.4, 0.9) the material may
exhibit superplastic behaviour ? m 1 ?
material behaves like a viscous liquid (Newtonian
flow)
- Thermal softening coefficient (?) is also defined
as below
28Funda Check
- What is the important of m and n
- We have seen that below recrystallization
temperature n is the important parameter. - Above recrystallization temperature it is m
which is important. - We have also noted that it is necking which
limits the ductility in uniaxial tension. - Necking implies that there is locally more
deformation (strain) and the strain rate is also
higher locally. - Hence, if the locally deformed material becomes
harder (stronger) then the deformation will
spread to other regions along the gauge length
and we will obtain more ductility. - Hence having a higher value of n or m is
beneficial for obtaining good ductility.
29Plastic deformation by slip
Click here to see overview of mechanisms/modes of
plastic deformation
- As we noted in the beginning of the chapter
plastic deformation can occur by many mechanisms
? SLIP is the most important of them. At low
temperatures (especially in BCC metals) twinning
may also be come important. - At the fundamental level plastic deformation (in
crystalline materials) by slip involves the
motion of dislocations on the slip plane ?
finally leaving the crystal/grain (creating a
step of Burgers vector). - Slip is caused by shear stresses (at the level of
the slip plane). Hence, a purely hydrostatic
state of stress cannot cause slip (or twinning
for that matter). - A slip system consists of a slip direction lying
on a slip plane. - Under any given external loading conditions, slip
will be initiated on a particular slip system if
the Resolved Shear Stress (RSS) exceeds a
critical value the Critical Resolved Shear
Stress (CRSS). - For slip to occur in polycrystalline materials, 5
independent slip systems are required. Hence,
materials which are ductile in single crystalline
form, may not be ductile in polycrystalline form.
CCP crystals (Cu, Al, Au) have excellent
ductility. - At higher temperatures more slip systems may
become active and hence polycrystalline materials
which are brittle at low temperature, may become
ductile at high temperature.
Leaving the crystal part is important To be
defined soon
30Slip systems
- In CCP, HCP materials the slip system consists of
a close packed direction on a close packed plane. - Just the existence of a slip system does not
guarantee slip ? slip is competing against other
processes like twinning and fracture. If the
stress to cause slip is very high (i.e. CRSS is
very high), then fracture may occur before slip
(like in brittle ceramics).
Crystal Slip plane(s) Slip direction Number of slip systems
FCC 111 ½lt110gt 12
HCP (0001) lt11?20gt 3
BCCNot close packed 110, 112, 123 ½111 12
NaClIonic 110111 not a slip plane ½lt110gt 6
CDiamond cubic 111 ½lt110gt 12
31More examples of slip systems
Crystal Slip plane(s) Slip direction Slip systems
TiO2 Rutile 101 lt10?1gt
CaF2, UO2, ThO2 Fluorite 001 lt1?10gt
CsClB2 110 lt001gt
NaCl, LiF, MgORock Salt 110 lt110gt 6
C, Ge, SiDiamond cubic 111 lt110gt 12
MgAl2O4 Spinel 111 lt1?10gt
Al2O3 Hexagonal (0001) lt11?20gt
32More examples of slip systems
Crystal Slip plane(s) Slip direction (b) Slip systems
Cu (FCC) Fm ?3m 111 (a/2)lt 1 ?10gt 4 x 3 12
W (BCC) Im ?3m 011 112 123 (a/2)lt11 ?1gt 6 x 2 12 12 x 1 12 24 x 1 24
Mg (HCP) P63/mmc 0001 10 ?10 10 ?11 (a/3)lt11?20gt 1 x 3 3 3 x 1 3 6 x 1 6
Al2O3 R ?3c 0001 10 10 (a/3)lt11?20gt 1 x 3 3 3 x 1 3
NaCl Fm ?3m 110 001 (a/2)lt 1 ?10gt 6 x 1 6 6 x 1 6
CsCl Pm ?3m 110 alt001gt 6 x 1 6
Polyethylene Pnam (100) 110 (010) clt001gt 1 x 1 1 2 x 1 2 1 x 1 1
33Critical Resolved Shear Stress (CRSS)
What is the connection between Peierls stress and
CRSS?
- As we saw plastic deformation by slip is due to
shear stresses. - Even if we apply an tensile force on the specimen
? the shear stress resolved onto the slip plane
is responsible for slip. - When the Resolved Shear Stress (RSS) reaches a
critical value ? Critical Resolved Shear Stress
(CRSS) ? plastic deformation starts (The actual
Schmids law)
?
A
?
Slip plane normal
Slip direction
?
?
A
Schmid factor
Note externally only tensile forces are being
applied
34Schmids law
Slip is initiated when
?CRSS is a material parameter, which is
determined from experiments
Yield strength of a single crystal
35How does the motion of dislocations lead to a
macroscopic shape change? (From microscopic slip
to macroscopic deformation ? a first feel!)
- When one bents a rod of aluminium to a new shape,
it involves processes occurring at various
lengthscales and understanding these is an
arduous task. - However, at the fundamental level slip is at the
heart of the whole process. - To understand how slip can lead to shape
change? we consider a square crystal deformed
to a rhombus (as Below).
36Step formed when dislocationleaves the crystal
Dislocation formed bypushing ina plane
?
Now visualize dislocations being punched in on
successive planes ? moving and finally leaving
the crystal
37(No Transcript)
38This sequence of events finally leads to deformed
shape which can be approximated to a rhombus
Net shape change
39Stress to move a dislocation Peierls Nabarro
(PN) stress
- We have seen that there is a critical stress
required to move a dislocation. - At the fundamental level the motion of a
dislocation involves the rearrangement of bonds ?
requires application of shear stress on the slip
plane. - When sufficient stress is applied the
dislocation moves from one metastable energy
minimum to another. - The original model is due to Peierls Nabarro
(formula as below) and the sufficient stress
which needs to be applied is called
Peierls-Nabarro stress (PN stress) or simply
Peierls stress. - Width of the dislocation is considered as a basis
for the ease of motion of a dislocation in the
model which is a function of the bonding in the
material.
- G ? shear modulus of the crystal
- w ? width of the dislocation !!!
- b ? b
Click here to know more about Peierls Stress
40How to increase the strength?
- We have seen that slip of dislocations weakens
the crystal. Hence we have two strategies to
strengthen the crystal/material ? completely
remove dislocations ? difficult, but dislocation
free whiskers have been produced (however, this
is not a good strategy as dislocations can
nucleate during loading)? increase resistance to
the motion of dislocations or put impediments to
the motion of dislocations ? this can be done in
many ways as listed below.
- Solid solution strengthening (by adding
interstitial and substitutional alloying
elements). - Cold Work ? increase point defect and dislocation
density (Cold work increases Yield stress but
decreases the elongation, i.e. ductility). - Decrease in grain size ? grain boundaries provide
an impediment ot the motion of dislocations
(Hall-Petch hardening). - Precipitation/dispersion hardening ? introduce
precipitates or inclusions in the path of
dislocations which impede the motion of
dislocations.
Strengthening mechanisms
Precipitate Dispersoid
Forest dislocation
Solid solution
Grain boundary
41Applied shear stress vs internal opposition
- PN stress is the bare minimum stress required
for plastic deformation. Usually there will be
other sources of opposition/impediment to the
motion of dislocations in the material. Some of
these include ? Stress fields of other
dislocations? Stress fields from
coherent/semicoherent precipitates? Stress
fields from low angle grain boundaries? Grain
boundaries? Effect of solute atoms and
vacancies? Stacking Faults? Twin boundaries?
Phonon drag ? etc. - Some of these barriers (the short range
obstacles) can be overcome by thermal activation
(while other cannot be- the long range
obstacles). - These factors lead to the strengthening of the
material.
Applied shear stress (?)
Internal resisting stress (?i)
42Based of if the obstacle can be overcome by
thermal activation
Classification of the obstacles to motion of a
dislocation
- Athermal ? ? ? f (T, strain rate)
- These arise from long range internal stress
fields - Sources ?Stress fields of other
dislocations ?Incoherent precipitates
Long range obstacles (?G)
Note ?G has some temperature dependence as G
decreases with T
Internal resisting stress (?i)
Short range obstacles (?T)
- Thermal ? ? f (T, strain rate)
- Short range 10 atomic diameters
- T can help dislocations overcome these obstacles
- Sources ?Peierls-Nabarro stress
?Stress fields of coherent precipitates solute
atoms
43Effect of Temperature
- Motion of a dislocation can be assisted by
thermal energy. - However, motion of dislocations by pure thermal
activation is random. - A dislocation can be thermally activated to cross
the potential barrier Q to the neighbouring
metastable position. - Strain rate can be related to the temperature (T)
and Q as in the equation below. - This thermal activation reduces the Yield stress
(or flow stress). - Materials which are brittle at room temperature
may also become ductile at high temperatures.
Equilibrium positions of a dislocation
44Metallic
Very high temperaturesneeded for thermal
activationto have any effect
Ionic
Fe-BCC
Fe
W-BCC
W
450
Al2O3
Covalent
Si
300
Yield Stress (MPa) ?
18-8 SS
Ni-FCC
150
Ni
Cu-FCC
Cu
0.6
0.0
0.2
0.4
T/Tm ?
RT is like HT and P-Nstress is easily overcome
45What causes Strain hardening? ? multiplication of
dislocations
- Why increase in dislocation density ?
- Why strain hardening ?
If dislocations were to leave the surfaceof the
crystal by slip / glide then the dislocation
density should decrease on plastic deformation ?
but observation is contrary to this
This implies some sources of dislocationmultiplic
ation / creation should exist
46Dislocation sources
- It is difficult to obtain crystals without
dislocations (under special conditions whiskers
have been grown without dislocations). - Dislocation can arise by/form? Solidification
(errors in the formation of a perfect crystal
lattice)? Plastic deformation (nucleation and
multiplication)? Irradiation
Some specific sources/methods of
formation/multiplication of dislocations include
- Solidification from the melt
- Grain boundary ledges and step emit dislocations
- Aggregation and collapse of vacancies to form a
disc or prismatic loop (FCC Frank partials) - High stresses ? Heterogeneous nucleation at
second phase particles ? During phase
transformation - Frank-Read source
- Orowan bowing mechanism
47Strain hardening
- We had noted that stress to cause further plastic
deformation (flow stress) increases with strain ?
strain hardening. This happens at - Dislocations moving in non-parallel slip planes
can intersect with each other ? results in an
increase in stress required to cause further
plastic deformation ? Strain Hardening / work
hardening - One such mechanism by which the dislocation is
immobilized is the Lomer-Cottrell barrier.
Dynamic recovery
- In single crystal experiments the rate of strain
hardening decreases with further strain after
reaching a certain stress level - At this stress level screw dislocations are
activated for cross-slip - The RSS on the new slip plane should be enough
for glide
48Formation of the Lomer-Cottrell barrier
49(111)
(-111)
(100)
- Lomer-Cottrell barrier ?
- The red and green dislocations attract each
other and move towards their line of intersection - They react as above to reduce their energy and
produce the blue dislocation - The blue dislocation lies on the (100) plane
which is not a close packed plane ? hence
immobile ? acts like a barrier to the motion of
other dislocations
50Impediments (barriers) to dislocation motion
- Grain boundary
- Immobile (sessile) dislocations ?
Lomer-Cottrell lock ? Frank partial dislocation - Twin boundary
- Precipitates and inclusions
- Dislocations get piled up at a barrier and
produce a back stress
51Stress to move a dislocation dislocation density
- ?0 ? base stress to move a dislocation in the
crystal in the absence of other dislocations - ? ? Dislocation density
- A ? A constant
Empirical relation
?? as ?? (cold work) ? ?? (i.e. strain
hardening)
? (MN / m2) ? ( m/ m3) ?0 (MN / m2) A (N/m)
1.5 1010 0.5 10
100 1014 0.5 10
COLD WORK ? ? strength ? ? ductility
52Grain size and strength
Hall-Petch Relation
- ?y ? Yield stress N/m2
- ?i ? Stress to move a dislocation in single
crystal N/m2 - k ? Locking parameter N/m3/2
(measure of the relative hardening contribution
of grain boundaries) - d ? Grain diameter m
53Grain size
- d ? Grain diameter in meters
- n ? ASTM grain size number
54Effect of solute atoms on strengthening
- Solid solutions offer greater resistance to
dislocation motion than pure crystals (even
solute with a lower strength gives
strengthening!) - The stress fields around solute atoms interact
with the stress fields around the dislocation to
leading to an increase in the stress required for
the motion of a dislocation - The actual interaction between a dislocation and
a solute is much more complex - The factors playing an important role are?
Size of the solute? more the size difference,
more the hardening effect? Elastic modulus of
the solute (higher the elastic modulus of the
solute greater the strengthening effect) ? e/a
ratio of the solute - A curved dislocation line configuration is
required for the solute atoms to provide
hindrance to dislocation motion - As shown in the plots in the next slide,
increased solute concentration leads to an
increased hardening. However, this fact has to be
weighed in the backdrop of solubility of the
solute. Carbon in BCC Fe has very little
solubility (0.08 wt.) and hence the approach of
pure solid solution strengthening to harden a
material can have a limited scope.
55For the same size difference thesmaller atom
gives a greaterstrengthening effect
Size effect
Size difference
Size effect depends on
Concentration of the solute (c)
200
Matrix Cu (r 1.28 Å)
Sn (1.51)
Be (1.12)
150
Solute strengthening of Cu crystal by solutes of
different sizes
Si (1.18)
Ni (1.25)
Al (1.43)
100
?y (MPa) ?
Zn (1.31)
50
(Values in parenthesis are atomic radius values
in Å)
Solute Concentration (Atom ) ?
40
10
20
30
0
56By ? ?i (lattice friction)
X
? ?y
? ?
Solute atoms
? level of ? - ? curve
? ?
Often produce Yield Point Phenomenon
57Relative strengthening effect of Interstitial and
Substitutional atoms
- Interstitial solute atoms have a non-spherical
distortion field and can elastically interact
with both edge and screw dislocations. Hence they
give a higher hardening effect (per unit
concentration) as compared to substitutional
atoms which have (approximately) a spherical
distortion field.
Relative strengthening effect / unit concentration
Interstitial
3Gsolute
Solute atoms
Gsolute / 10
Substitutional
58(No Transcript)
59Interstitial ? Edge and screw dl.
Elastic
Substitutional ? edge
Long range(T insensitive)
Modulus
Long range order
Mechanisms of interaction of dislocations with
solute atoms
Solute-dislocation interaction
Stacking fault
Short range (T sensitive)
Electrical
Short range order
60The hardening effect of precipitates
- Precipitates may be coherent, semi-coherent or
incoherent. Coherent ( semi-coherent)
precipitates are associated with coherency
stresses. - Dislocations cannot glide through incoherent
precipitates. - Inclusions behave similar to incoherent
precipitates in this regard (precipitates are
part of the system, whilst inclusions are
external to the alloy system). - A pinned dislocation (at a precipitate) has to
either climb over it (which becomes favourable at
high temperatures) or has to bow around it.
Glide through the precipitate
If the precipitate is coherent with the matrix
Dislocation
Get pinned by the precipitate
A complete list of factors giving rise to
hardening due to precipitates/inclusions will be
considered later
61Dislocation Glide through the precipitate
- Only if slip plane is continuous from the matrix
through the precipitate ? precipitate is coherent
with the matrix. - Stress to move the dislocation through the
precipitate is that to move it in the matrix
(though it is usually higher as precipitates can
be intermetallic compounds). - Usually during precipitation the precipitate is
coherent only when it is small and becomes
incoherent on growth. -
- Glide of the dislocation causes a displacement of
the upper part of the precipitate w.r.t the lower
part by b ? cutting of the precipitate.
62Schematic views ? edge dislocation glide through
a coherent precipitate
b
63If the particle is sheared, then how does the
hardening effect come about?
- We have seen that as the dislocation glides
through the precipitate it is sheared. - If the precipitate is sheared, then how does it
offer any resistance to the motion of the
dislocation? I.e. how can this lead to a
hardening effect? - The hardening effect due to a precipitate comes
about due to many factors (many of which are
system specific). The important ones are listed
in the tree below.
Increase in surface area due to particle shearing
Hardening effect
Part of the dislocation line segment (inside the
precipitate) could face a higher PN stress
64Pinning effect of inclusions
Orowan bowing mechanism
- Dislocations can bow around widely separated
inclusions. In this process they leave
dislocation loops around the inclusions, thus
leading to an increase in dislocation density.
This is known as the orowan bowing mechanism as
shown in the figure below. (This is in some
sense similar to the Frank-Read mechanism). - The next dislocation arriving (similar to the
first one), feels a repulsion from the
dislocation loop and hence the stress required to
drive further dislocations increases.
Additionally, the effective separation distance
(through which the dislocation has to bow)
reduces from d to d1.
65Precipitate Hardening effect
(Complete List)
- The hardening effect of precipitates can arise in
many ways as below - Lattice Resistance the dislocation may face an
increased lattice friction stress in the
precipitate. - Chemical Strengthening arises from additional
interface created on shearing - Stacking-fault Strengthening due to difference
between stacking-fault energy between particle
and matrix when these are both FCC or HCP (when
dislocations are split into partials) - Modulus Hardening due to difference in elastic
moduli of the matrix and particle - Coherency Strengthening due to elastic coherency
strains surrounding the particle - Order Strengthening due to additional work
required to create an APB in case of dislocations
passing through precipitates which have an
ordered lattice
66Strain rate effects
- We had noted that strain rate can vary by orders
of magnitude depending on deformation process
(Creep 108 to Explosions 105). - Strain rate effects become significant (on
properties like flow stress) only when strain
rate is varied by orders of magnitude (i.e. small
changes in flow stress do not affect the value of
the properties much). - Strain rate can be related to dislocation
velocity by the equation below.
- vd ? velocity of the dislocations
- ?d ? density of mobile/glissile dislocations
- b ? b
67In a UTT why does the plot not continue along OY
(straight line)?
Funda Check
- When stress is increased beyond the yield stress
the mechanism of deformation changes. - Till Y in the s-e plot, bond elongation
(elastic deformation) gives rise to the strain. - After Y, the shear stress resulting from the
applied tensile force, tends to move dislocations
(and cause slip) ? rather than stretch bonds ? as
this will happen at lower stresses as compared to
bond stretching (beyond Y). - If there are not dislocations (e.g. in a whisker)
(and for now we ignore other mechanism of
deformation), the material will continue to load
along the straight line OY ? till dislocations
nucleate in the crystal.
68TWINNING