Creep and Superplasticity

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
MECHANICAL PROPERTIES OF MATERIALS
Advertisements

LECTURER5 Fracture Brittle Fracture Ductile Fracture Fatigue Fracture
Chapter 7 Fracture: Macroscopic Aspects. Goofy Duck Analog for Modes of Crack Loading “Goofy duck” analog for three modes of crack loading. (a) Crack/beak.
ME 240: Introduction to Engineering Materials Chapter 8. Failure 8.1 CHAPTER 8.
NEEP 541 – Creep Fall 2002 Jake Blanchard.
FRACTURE Fracture is the separation, or fragmentation, of a solid body into two or more parts under the action of stress. Process of fracture- with two.
Chapter 9 Failure of Materials
4. Factors Effecting Work Hardening Characteristics Assoc.Prof.Dr. Ahmet Zafer Şenalp Mechanical Engineering.
CREEP  It can be defined as the slow & progressive (increasingly continuing) deformation of a material with time under a constant stress.  It is both.
CREEP FAILURE.
Chapter Outline: Failure
High Temp Behavior of Materials : Mechanical degradation Chemical Degradation Gas Turbine and jet Turbine Nuclear reactors Power plants Spacecraft Chemical.
High Temperature Deformation of Crystalline Materials Dr. Richard Chung Department of Chemical and Materials Engineering San Jose State University.
Materials at High temperature , Creep
3.5 STRAIN ENERGY When material is deformed by external loading, energy is stored internally throughout its volume Internal energy is also referred to.
Safety Factor for Design
Diffusion Movement of atoms in a material Thermal Energy = Atom Movement Eliminates concentration differences Important for material processing (heat treating,
Time-Dependent Properties (1) Creep plastic deformation under constant load over time at specified temp. strain vs. time curve a) primary creep:
Grain Boundaries Ni-Base Superalloy Waspalloy 50µm high-angle grain boundary (  >15°) low-angle grain boundary.
Continuum Mechanics Mohsen Malayjerdi. » Strain : intensity of deformation strain = change in length/original length » Stress : intensity of force Stress.
BMFB 4283 NDT & FAILURE ANALYSIS
Chapter 11 Mechanical Properties of Materials
Normal Strain and Stress
MECHANICAL PROPERTIES OF MATERIALS
NOTCH EFFECTS INTRODUCTION OF A NOTCH AFFECTS THE FRACTURE PROCESS Eg: INCREASES THE DUCTILE-BRITTLE TRANSITION TEMPERATURE OF STEEL NOTCH CREATES A LOCAL.
Engineering materials lecture #14
Chapter 6 Geometry of Deformation and Work-Hardening.
Design of an Aerospace Component
Chapter Outline: Failure
Chapter 11 Martensitic Strengthening. Systems that Show Martensitic Transformations.
DESIGNING UNDER HIGH T CONDITION The effect of service environment on material performance at elevated T can be divided into 3 main categories :  Microstructural.
Chapter 8 Fracture: Microstructural Aspects. Different Fracture Modes.
EBB 220/3 PRINCIPLE OF VISCO-ELASTICITY
ENGR 225 Section
LECTURER 3 Fundamental Mechanical Properties (i)Tensile strength
MECHANICAL PROPERTIES OF MATERIALS
CHAPTER OBJECTIVES Show relationship of stress and strain using experimental methods to determine stress-strain diagram of a specific material Discuss.
Anandh Subramaniam & Kantesh Balani
Low Cycle Fatigue (LCF) High Cycle Fatigue (HCF)
DISLOCATION MOVEMENT.
CHAPTER 6: MECHANICAL PROPERTIES
Mechanical Properties
Chapter 2 Elasticity and Viscoelasticity. Mechanical Testing Machine.
Fracture This is BIG topic Underlines all of Failure Analysis – One of the big fields that metallurgists/ material scientists get involved in There are.
Module 8 Overview of processes 1. Module 82 Metal forming Principle of the process Structure Process modeling Defects Design For Manufacturing (DFM) Process.
Copyright Prentice-Hall Behavior and Manufacturing Properties of Part I Q1.1 (25): What is the difference between a material’s mechanical property and.
Week 4 Fracture, Toughness, Fatigue, and Creep
Introduction to Materials Science, Chapter 7, Dislocations and strengthening mechanisms University of Virginia, Dept. of Materials Science and Engineering.
Safety Factor for Design
Registered Electrical & Mechanical Engineer
A New Deformation Model for the Creep Behavior of Nanocrystalline Materials in Terms of Dislocation-Accommodated Boundary Sliding DMR Farghalli.
4 Mechanical Properties of Biomaterials CHAPTER 4.1 Introduction
Poisson's ratio, n • Poisson's ratio, n: Units:
Chapter 2 Properties of Metals.
MATSE 259 Spring 2007, C. Muhlstein© C. Muhlstein, 2007 The contents of this lecture are protected under U.S. copyright law and should not be duplicated.
Section 6.10 Fracture Mechanics
Fig. 2 Correlations Between the Model of Dislocation-Accommodated Boundary Sliding and Experimental Data for Nanocrystalline Ni – (II) Farghalli A. Mohamed,
Lecture 21 Creep ME 330 Engineering Materials Creep Curves Temperature and Stress Effects Creep Mechanisms Creep Resistance Read Chapter 15.
EGM 5653 Advanced Mechanics of Materials
Week 4 Fracture, Toughness, Fatigue, and Creep
Materials Science Chapter 8 Deformation and Fracture.
Materials Science Metals and alloys.
High Temperature Irreversible Deformation
CHAPTER OBJECTIVES Show relationship of stress and strain using experimental methods to determine stress-strain diagram of a specific material Discuss.
Poisons Ratio Poisons ratio = . w0 w Usually poisons ratio ranges from
By; Noor Azira binti Mohd Noor
Materials: engineering, science, processing and design, 2nd edition Copyright (c)2010 Michael Ashby, Hugh Shercliff, David Cebon.
1/18/2019 6:28 AM C h a p t e r 8 Failure Dr. Mohammad Abuhaiba, PE.
CREEP C H YADHUKRISHNA
CREEP CREEP Dr. Mohammed Abdulrazzaq Materials Engineering Department.
Presentation transcript:

Creep and Superplasticity Chapter 13 Creep and Superplasticity

Creep Strain vs.Time: Constant Temperature

Creep Strain vs. Time at Constant Engineering Stress

Creep Machine Length of specimen has increased Initial position from L0 to L1. Initial position Creep machine with variable lever arms to ensure constant stress on specimen; note that l2 decreases as the length of the specimen increases.

Mukherjee-Bird-Dorn Equation

Larson-Miller Equation Relationship between time to rupture and temperature at three levels of engineering stress, σa, σb, and σc, using Larson–Miller equation (σa > σb > σc).

Larson-Miller Parameter Master plot for Larson–Miller parameter for S-590 alloy (an Fe-based alloy) (C = 17). (From R. M. Goldhoff, Mater.Design Eng., 49 (1959) 93.)

Manson-Hafered Parameter Relationship between time rupture and temperature at three levels of stress, σa, σb, and σc, using Manson–Haferd parameter (σa > σb > σc).

Sherby-Dorn Parameter Relationship between time to rupture and temperature at three levels of stress, σa > σb > σc, using Sherby–Dorn parameter.

Material Parameters

Activation Energies for Creep Activation energies for creep (stage II) and self-diffusion for a number of metals. (Adapted with permission from O. D. Sherby and A. K. Miller, J. Eng. Mater.Technol., 101 (1979) 387.)

Secondary Creep Ratio between activation energy for secondary creep and activation energy for bulk diffusion as a function of temperature. (Adapted with permission from O. D. Sherby and A. K. Miller, J. Eng. Mater. Technol., 101 (1979) 387.)

Fundamental Creep Mechanism σ/G < 10^(-4) Diffusion Creep Nabarro Herring Coble Creep Harper Dorn Creep

Diffusion Creep Flow of vacancies according to (a) Nabarro–Herring and (b) Coble mechanisms, resulting in an increase in the length of the specimen.

Dislocation Climb Dislocation climb (a) upwards, under compressive σ22 stresses, and (b) downwards, under tensile σ22 stresses.

Diffusion Creep Different regimes for diffusion creep in alumina; notice that cations (Al3+) and anions (O2−) have different diffusion coefficients, leading to different regimes of dominance. (From A. H. Chokshi and T. G. Langdon, Defect and Diffusion Forum, 66–69 (1989) 1205.)

Dislocation (Power Law) Creep: 10^(-2) < σ/G < 10^(-4) Power relationship between ˙ε and σ for AISI 316 stainless steel. Adapted with permission from S. N. Monteiro and T. L. da Silveira, Metalurgia-ABM, 35 (1979) 327.

Dislocations Overcoming Obstacles Weertman Mechanism Dislocation overcoming obstacles by climb, according to Weertman theory. (a) Overcoming Cottrell–Lomer locks. (b) Overcoming an obstacle.

Shear Stress and Shear Strain Rate Shear stress vs. shear strain rate in an aluminum (6061) with 30 vol.% SiC particulate composite in creep. (From K.-T. Park, E. J. Lavernia, and F. A. Mohamed, Acta Met. Mater., 38 (1990) 2149.)

Dislocation Glide Effect of stress and temperature on deformation substructure developed in AISI 316 stainless steel in middle of stage II. Reprinted with permission from H.-J. Kestenbach, W. Krause, and T. L. da Silveira, Acta Met., 26 (1978) 661.)

Grain Boundary Sliding (a) Steady-state grain-boundary sliding with diffusional accommodations. (b) Same process as in (a), in an idealized polycrystal; the dashed lines show the flow of vacancies. (Reprinted with permission from R. Raj and M. F. Ashby, Met. Trans., 2A (1971) 1113.)

Ashby-Verrall’s Model Grain-boundary sliding assisted by diffusion in Ashby–Verrall’s model. (Reprinted with permission from M. F. Ashby and R. A. Verrall, Acta Met., 21 (1973) 149.)

Weertman-Ashby Map for Pure Silver Weertman–Ashby map for pure silver, established for a critical strain rate of 10−8 s−1; it can be seen how the deformation-mechanism fields are affected by the grain size. Adapted with permission from M. F. Ashby, Acta Met., 20 (1972) 887.

Weertman-Ashby Map for Tungsten Weertman–Ashby map for tungsten, showing constant strain-rate contours. (Reprinted with permission from M. F. Ashby, Acta Met., 20 (1972) 887.)

Weertman-Ashby Map for Al2O3

Mechanisms of intergranular nucleation . (From W.D. Nix and J. C. Gibeling, in Flow and Fracture at ElevatedTemperatures, ed, R. Raj (Metals Park, Ohio: ASM, 1985).)

Heat-Resistance Materials Transmission electron micrograph of Mar M-200; notice the cuboidal γ precipitates. (Courtesy of L. E. Murr.)

Microstructural Strengthening Mechanism in nickel-based superalloys (Reprinted with from C. T. Sims and W. C. Hagel, eds., The Superalloys (New York: Wiley, 1972), p. 33.)

Rafting Rafting in MAR M-200 monocrystalline superalloy; (a) original configuration of gamma prime precipitates aligned with three orthogonal cube axes; (b) creep deformed at 1253 K for 28 hours along the [010] direction, leading to coarsening of precipitates along loading direction. (From U. Glatzel, “Microstructure and Internal Strains of Undeformed and Creep Deformed Samples of a Nickel-Based Superalloy,” Habilitation Dissertation,Technische Universit¨at, Berlin, 1994.)

Stress-Rupture (at 1000 hours) vs. Temperature for Heat Resistant Materials Stress versus temperatures curves for rupture in 1,000 hours for selected nickel-based superalloys. (Reprinted with permission from C. T. Sims and W. C. Hagel, eds., The Superalloys (New York: Wiley, 1972), p. vii.)

Gas Turbine Cross-section of a gas turbine showing different parts. The temperature of gases in combustion chamber reaches 1500 ◦C.

Turbine Blade (a) Single crystal turbine blade developed for stationary turbine. (Courtesy of U. Glatzel.) (b) Evolution of maximum temperature in gas turbines; notice the significant improvement made possible by the introduction of thermal barrier coatings (TBCs). (Courtesy of V. Thien, Siemens.)

Creep in Polymers Spring–dashpot analogs (a) in series and (b) in parallel.

Maxwell and Voigt Models Strain–time and (b) stress–time predictions for Maxwell and Voigt models.

Viscoelastic Polymer Strain response as a function of time for a glassy, viscoelastic polymer subjected to a constant stress σ0. Increasing the molecular weight or degree of cross-linking tends to promote secondary bonding between chains and thus make the polymer more creep resistant.

Creep Compliances (a) A series of creep compliances vs. time, both on logarithmic scales, over a range of temperature. (b) The individual plots in (a) can be superposed by horizontal shifting (along the log-time axis) by an amount log aT, to obtain a master curve corresponding to a reference temperature Tg of the polymer. (c) Shift along the log-time scale to produce a master curve. (Courtesy of W. Knauss.) (d) “Experimentally” determined shift factor.

Stress Relaxation A constant imposed strain ε0 results in a drop in stress σ(t) as a function of time.

Effect of Crosslinking on Stress Relaxation A master curve obtained in the case of stress relaxation, showing the variation in the reduced modulus as a function of time. Also shown is the effect of cross-linking and molecular weight.

Electromigration Metal interconnect line covered by passivation layer subjected toelectromigration; (a) overall scheme; (b) voids and cracks produced by thermal mismatch and electromigration; (c) basic scheme used in Nix Arzt equation, which assumes grain-boundary diffusion of vacancies counterbalancing electron wind. (Adapted from W. D. Nix and E. Arzt. Met. Trans., 23A (1992) 2007.)

Superplasticity Superplastic tensile deformation in Pb–62% Sn eutectic alloy tested at 415 K and a strain rate of 1.33 × 10−4 s−1; total strain of 48.5. (From M. M. I. Ahmed and T. G. Langdon, Met. Trans. A, 8 (1977) 1832.)

Plastic Deformation (a) Schematic representation of plastic deformation in tension with formation and inhibition of necking. (b) Engineering-stress– engineering-strain curves.

Strain Rate Dependence Strain-rate dependence of (a) stress and (b) strain-rate sensitivity for Mg–Al eutectic alloy tested at 350 ◦C (grain size 10 μm). (After D. Lee, Acta. Met., 17 (1969) 1057.)

Fracture Tensile fracture strain and stress as a function of strain rate for Zr–22% Al alloy with 2.5-μm grain size. (After F. A. Mohamed, M. M. I. Ahmed, and T. G. Langdon, Met. Trans. A, 8 (1977) 933.)

Effect of Strain Rate Sensitivity Effect of strain-rate sensitivity m on maximum tensile elongation for different alloys (Fe, Mg, Pu, Pb–Sr, Ti, Zn, Zr based). (From D. M. R. Taplin, G. L. Dunlop, and T. G. Langdon, Ann. Rev. Mater. Sci., 9 (1979) 151.)

Cavitation in Superplasticity Cavitation in superplasticity formed 7475-T6 aluminum alloy (ε = 3.5) at 475 ◦C and 5 × 10−4 s−1. (a) Atmospheric pressure. (b) Hydrostatic pressure P = 4 MPa. (Courtesy of A. K. Mukherjee.)

Effect of Grain Size on Elongation (a) Effect of grain size on elongation: (A) Initial configuration. (B) Large grains. (C) Fine grains (10 μm) (Reprinted with permission from N. E. Paton, C. H. Hamilton, J. Wert, and M. Mahoney, J. Metal, 34 (1981) No. 8, 21.) (b) Failure strains increase with superimposed hydrostatic pressure (from 0 to 5.6 MPa). (Courtesy of A. K. Mukherjee.)