A Comparison of Deformation Textures and Mechanical Properties Predicted by Different Crystal Plasticity Codes
Abstract
Four crystal plasticity codes, the viscoplastic Material Point Simulator (MPS) developed at Cornell, and the ViscoPlastic Self-Consistent code (VPSC7b), developed at LANL, and two elastic-viscoplastic codes developed at Drexel University, were employed to calculated deformation textures and mechanical properties of model polycrystalline specimens by simulating isochoric, free upsetting. Uniaxial compression of a model sample with a starting random texture of 5000 grains was carried out at a constant true stain rate of 0.001/s to a true strain of 1.0 with 0.02 strain increments. Material properties simulated a face-centered cubic (FCC) alloy, Type 304 Stainless Steel, and a hexagonal close-packed (HCP) material, unalloyed Ti, both non-hardening and linear hardening conditions were investigated. Different strain-rate sensitivities simulated deformation conditions appropriate to ambient and elevated temperature conditions. All codes permitted use of the Taylor homogenization hypothesis, resulting in an upper bound for the mechanical properties.
Document Details
- Document Type
- Technical Report
- Publication Date
- Apr 01, 2008
- Accession Number
- ADA490076
Entities
People
- Ayman A. Salem
- Carlos Tome
- Craig S. Hartley
- Donald E. Boyce
- Marko Knezevic
- Paul R. Dawson
- Ricardo A Lebensohn
- Sheldon Lee Semiatin
- Surya R. Kalidindi
- Todd J. Turner
Organizations
- Air Force Research Laboratory