3.8 Article

Assessment of creep behavior using a damage-coupled model for martensitic stainless steel

Journal

MECHANICAL ENGINEERING JOURNAL
Volume 8, Issue 5, Pages -

Publisher

JAPAN SOC MECHANICAL ENGINEERS
DOI: 10.1299/mej.21-00178

Keywords

Creep behavior; Liu-Murakami creep damage model; Creep constants; Accelerated creep test; Martensitic stainless steel; Stress sensitivity; Temperature compensation

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The study evaluated the creep properties of martensitic stainless steel using the LM model, determining creep constants through experiments and analysis. The creep strain-time curves were successfully estimated, characterizing the creep behavior of the material.
In this study, the Liu-Murakami (LM) creep damage-coupled model was considered to evaluate the creep properties of martensitic stainless steel. The degree of creep damage was examined at two temperatures (565 degrees C and 593 degrees C) to assess mechanically and thermally activated processes. A series of high applied stresses (applied stress/ultimate strength > 0.5) was considered for accelerated creep loadings. A full set of creep constants was determined by combining the Norton and LM models. Constitutive equations were used to quantitatively estimate experimental creep curves. The variation in creep constants was discussed based on stress sensitivity, such as stress triaxiality and applied stress, depending on the power of stress. The creep strain-time curves were successfully estimated. The comparison between the experimental and analytical results was in good agreement in the tertiary regime. In addition, the compensation of the two applied temperatures provides a supplementary explanation of the relationship between the ultimate strength and rupture time in terms of temperature sensitivity. The analytical results show that different applied stresses and temperatures could be compensated to characterize the creep behavior of the material. Thus, the creep strain-time and creep strain rate-certain rupture time curves were finally achieved. The analytical process in this study provides a laboratory-scale assessment of creep properties using the accelerated creep test and LM model.

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