TY - JOUR
T1 - Development of elasto-viscoplastic constitutive equation for Al-Mg alloy with tensile test in partial solidification
AU - Takai, Ryosuke
AU - Matsushita, Akira
AU - Yanagida, Shogo
AU - Nakamura, Koichiro
AU - Yoshida, Makoto
PY - 2013/11/18
Y1 - 2013/11/18
N2 - In order to predict the hot tearing during DC casting by using thermal stress analysis, constitutive equations in both solid-liquid coexisting and below solidus of alloy are inevitable. However, previous constitutive equations used in hot tearing predictions have no less than one problem as follows. (1) Testing methods of obtaining material constants weren't appropriate. Firstly, elastic strain reversibility was unconfirmed. Secondary, flat distribution of temperature in gauge length of specimen wasn't guaranteed. Thirdly, strain was measured from not local strain but cross head displacement. Fourth, the melt-back phenomenon was unavoidable in partial melting method which was caused by homogenization of segregation structure. (2) Temperature dependence of strain rate sensitivity of stress wasn't considered. (3) Some material constants were not obtained experimentally but guessed. In this study, elastoviscoplastic constitutive equations(Hooke's and Norton's laws)for both partial solidification and below solidus were developed. In order to obtain material constants experimentally, two tensile tests which the problem (1) was solved were conducted using Al-5mass%Mg alloy. They were partial solidification tensile tests(above solidus) and high temperature tensile test with high frequency induction (below solidus). Then, temperature dependence of elastic, viscoplastic properties were investigated and material constants were obtained. Furthermore, they were compared with other previous testing methods.
AB - In order to predict the hot tearing during DC casting by using thermal stress analysis, constitutive equations in both solid-liquid coexisting and below solidus of alloy are inevitable. However, previous constitutive equations used in hot tearing predictions have no less than one problem as follows. (1) Testing methods of obtaining material constants weren't appropriate. Firstly, elastic strain reversibility was unconfirmed. Secondary, flat distribution of temperature in gauge length of specimen wasn't guaranteed. Thirdly, strain was measured from not local strain but cross head displacement. Fourth, the melt-back phenomenon was unavoidable in partial melting method which was caused by homogenization of segregation structure. (2) Temperature dependence of strain rate sensitivity of stress wasn't considered. (3) Some material constants were not obtained experimentally but guessed. In this study, elastoviscoplastic constitutive equations(Hooke's and Norton's laws)for both partial solidification and below solidus were developed. In order to obtain material constants experimentally, two tensile tests which the problem (1) was solved were conducted using Al-5mass%Mg alloy. They were partial solidification tensile tests(above solidus) and high temperature tensile test with high frequency induction (below solidus). Then, temperature dependence of elastic, viscoplastic properties were investigated and material constants were obtained. Furthermore, they were compared with other previous testing methods.
KW - Aluminum alloy
KW - Direct-chill casting
KW - Elasto-viscoplastic constitutive equation
KW - Hot tearing
KW - Solidification
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U2 - 10.2464/jilm.63.310
DO - 10.2464/jilm.63.310
M3 - Article
AN - SCOPUS:84887498973
SN - 0451-5994
VL - 63
SP - 310
EP - 317
JO - Keikinzoku/Journal of Japan Institute of Light Metals
JF - Keikinzoku/Journal of Japan Institute of Light Metals
IS - 9
ER -