Title of article :
Elastic/crystalline viscoplastic finite element analyses of single- and poly-crystal sheet deformations and their experimental verification
Author/Authors :
E. Nakamachi، نويسنده , , K. Hiraiwa، نويسنده , , Md. A. Baten and H. Morimoto، نويسنده , , M. Harimoto، نويسنده ,
Issue Information :
روزنامه با شماره پیاپی سال 2000
Abstract :
The elastic/crystalline viscoplastic constitutive equation, based on a newly proposed hardening-softening evolution equation, is introduced into the dynamic-explicit finite element code “Itas-Dynamic.” In the softening evolution equation, the effective distance and the angle between each slip system of a crystal are introduced to elucidate the interaction between the slip systems, which causes a decrease of dislocation density. The polycrystal sheet is modeled by Voronoi polygons, which correspond to the crystal grains; and by the selected orientations, which can relate to the texture, they are assigned to the integration points of the finite elements. We propose a direct crystal orientation assignment method, which means that each integration point of finite element has an assigned orientation, and its orientation can be rotated independently. Therefore, this inhomogeneous polycrystal model can consider the plastic induced texture development and subsequent anisotropy evolution. The parameters of the constitutive equation are identified by uni-axial tension tests carried out on single crystal sheets. Numerical results obtained for sheet tensions are compared with experimental ones to confirm the validity of our finite element code. Further, we investigate the following subjects: (1) how the initial orientation of single crystal affects slip band formation and strain localization; (2) how the grain size and particular orientations of the grain affect the strain localization in case of a polycrystal sheet. It is confirmed that the orientation of a single crystal can be related to the primary slip system and the deformation induced activation of that system, which in turn can be related to the slip band formation of the single crystal sheet. Further, in case of a polycrystal sheet, the larger the grain size, the more the strain localizes at a specific crystal, which has the particular orientation. It is confirmed through comparisons with experiments that our finite element code can predict the localization of strain in sheets and consequently can estimate the formability of sheet metals.
Keywords :
B. Polycrystalline material , C. Finite elements , A. Dislocations , Grain boundaries , Microstructures
Journal title :
International Journal of Plasticity
Journal title :
International Journal of Plasticity