TY - JOUR
T1 - Flow stress correction for hot compression of titanium alloys considering temperature gradient induced heterogeneous deformation
AU - Xiao, H.
AU - Fan, X. G.
AU - Zhan, M.
AU - Liu, B. C.
AU - Zhang, Z. Q.
N1 - Publisher Copyright:
© 2020 Elsevier B.V.
PY - 2021/2
Y1 - 2021/2
N2 - Uniaxial compression is widely employed to investigate the constitutive behavior and microstructural developments of metallic materials at elevated temperatures. However, the heat exchange between work-piece and anvils leads to temperature gradient and inhomogeneous deformation within the work-piece, which weakens the reliability of the testing method. The problem is more serious for titanium alloys due to the poor thermal conductivity and high sensitivity of deformation resistance on temperature. To quantify the effect of temperature gradient, a coupled thermo-electric-mechanical FE model is developed for hot compression of TA15 titanium alloy with a Gleeble thermal simulator. The precise temperature control is achieved via a negative feedback control algorithm. It is found that the temperature gradient prior to deformation is sensitive to the electrical contact conductance between specimen and anvils as well as the heat transfer between the anvil and anvil base. Bulging is sensitive to temperature gradient rather than interfacial friction. The measured flow stress is smaller than the true value at large strain for the titanium alloy, which is contrary to conventional perception. Thus, the traditional flow stress correction method degrades the accuracy of flow stress measurement. A correction procedure is developed based on inverse analysis of the FE simulation. The results can reduce the systematic error of flow stress measurement of titanium alloys with Gleeble system.
AB - Uniaxial compression is widely employed to investigate the constitutive behavior and microstructural developments of metallic materials at elevated temperatures. However, the heat exchange between work-piece and anvils leads to temperature gradient and inhomogeneous deformation within the work-piece, which weakens the reliability of the testing method. The problem is more serious for titanium alloys due to the poor thermal conductivity and high sensitivity of deformation resistance on temperature. To quantify the effect of temperature gradient, a coupled thermo-electric-mechanical FE model is developed for hot compression of TA15 titanium alloy with a Gleeble thermal simulator. The precise temperature control is achieved via a negative feedback control algorithm. It is found that the temperature gradient prior to deformation is sensitive to the electrical contact conductance between specimen and anvils as well as the heat transfer between the anvil and anvil base. Bulging is sensitive to temperature gradient rather than interfacial friction. The measured flow stress is smaller than the true value at large strain for the titanium alloy, which is contrary to conventional perception. Thus, the traditional flow stress correction method degrades the accuracy of flow stress measurement. A correction procedure is developed based on inverse analysis of the FE simulation. The results can reduce the systematic error of flow stress measurement of titanium alloys with Gleeble system.
KW - coupled thermo-electric-mechanical simulation
KW - flow stress correction
KW - inhomogeneous deformation
KW - temperature gradient
KW - uniaxial compression
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=85089199240&partnerID=8YFLogxK
U2 - 10.1016/j.jmatprotec.2020.116868
DO - 10.1016/j.jmatprotec.2020.116868
M3 - 文章
AN - SCOPUS:85089199240
SN - 0924-0136
VL - 288
JO - Journal of Materials Processing Technology
JF - Journal of Materials Processing Technology
M1 - 116868
ER -