4.7 Article

A unified fracture criterion considering stress state dependent transition of failure mechanisms in bcc steels at-196 °C

Journal

INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL OF PLASTICITY
Volume 156, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

PERGAMON-ELSEVIER SCIENCE LTD
DOI: 10.1016/j.ijplas.2022.103365

Keywords

Stress states; Fracture criterion; Cleavage fracture; Shear fracture; Threshold triaxiality

Funding

  1. Steel Europe AG
  2. RWTH Aachen University
  3. [rwth0241]

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This study investigated the fracture properties of a high-strength steel with a body-centered cubic (bcc) crystal structure. The results revealed that both strength and ductility of the steel increased significantly at low temperatures. The material exhibited high plasticity at -196 degrees C during tensile tests using various specimens, while macroscopic brittle fracture occurred under high triaxiality scenarios. It was observed that the failure mechanisms transitioned from cleavage fracture to shear failure with decreasing stress triaxiality. A unified stress-state-dependent fracture criterion, which considers the transition of failure mechanisms, was proposed to describe the fracture properties of similar bcc materials at cryogenic temperatures. The threshold triaxiality for the transition of failure mechanisms was determined by the material's strain hardening capacity and fracture strength. Additionally, a probabilistic formulation incorporating the extreme value distribution was used to account for the statistical nature of cleavage fracture.
The fracture properties of a high-strength steel with a body-centered cubic (bcc) crystal structure have been characterized at 196 degrees C by performing tensile tests with different specimen geometries, three-point bending tests using Charpy specimens, and fracture mechanics tests, covering a broad range of stress states under quasi-static conditions. Both strength and ductility of the bcc steel are significantly increased when the temperature is decreased from room temperature to -196 degrees C. Enormous plasticity occurs in the material during tensile tests using various specimens at -196 degrees C, while macroscopic brittle fracture takes place in high triaxiality scenarios. A stress state dependence of ductile to brittle transition properties is observed, as the failure mechanisms at -196 degrees C change from cleavage fracture to shear failure with decreasing stress triaxiality. A unified stress-state-dependent fracture criterion, which considers the transition of failure mechanisms, is proposed to describe the fracture properties of similar bcc materials at cryogenic temperatures. The threshold triaxiality at which the transition of failure mechanisms takes place is a material property that is determined by the strain hardening capacity and fracture strength. In addition, a probabilistic formulation relying on the extreme value distribution has been incorporated into the model to render the statistical nature of cleavage fracture.

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