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The effect of low cycle fatigue, ratcheting and mean stress relaxation on stress-strain response and microstructural development in a dual phase steel
journal contribution
posted on 2015-07-01, 00:00 authored by Surajit Kumar Paul, N Stanford, Adam Taylor, Tim HilditchTim HilditchThis study examines the cyclic plastic deformation behavior and microstructural development of a dual phase steel in both symmetric and asymmetric cycling in strain and stress control modes. The low-cycle fatigue (LCF) and mean stress relaxation (MSR) tests show very similar fatigue lifetimes. However, fatigue lifetimes reduce and prominent accumulation of directional strain was observed in ratcheting. A microstructural analysis has revealed that the type of cyclic test carried out has a noticeable impact on the substructural development, and this has been correlated with differences in accumulated tensile strain. Electron backscatter diffraction investigation has shown larger in-grain misorientation for ratcheting specimen in comparison with LCF and MSR specimens. The orientation of ferrite grains was found to have very little effect on their substructural development, and strain localization commonly occurred in the ferrite at the ferrite/martensite interface.
History
Journal
International journal of fatigueVolume
80Pagination
341 - 348Publisher
ElsevierLocation
Amsterdam, The NetherlandsPublisher DOI
ISSN
0142-1123Language
engPublication classification
C Journal article; C1 Refereed article in a scholarly journalCopyright notice
2015, ElsevierUsage metrics
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Categories
Keywords
Dual phase steelLocal misorientationLow-cycle fatigueMean stress relaxationRatchetingScience & TechnologyTechnologyEngineering, MechanicalMaterials Science, MultidisciplinaryEngineeringMaterials Science304LN STAINLESS-STEELPLASTIC-DEFORMATIONFAILURE BEHAVIORSRECENT PROGRESSESMAGNESIUM ALLOYFERRITIC STEELAISI 316LDAMAGESHEET