4.7 Article

Implementation and application of a temperature-dependent Chaboche model

Journal

INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL OF PLASTICITY
Volume 75, Issue -, Pages 121-140

Publisher

PERGAMON-ELSEVIER SCIENCE LTD
DOI: 10.1016/j.ijplas.2015.03.002

Keywords

Constitutive behaviour; Fracture; Thermomechanical processes; Numerical algorithms; Advanced High Strength Steel (AHSS)

Funding

  1. Posco Steel
  2. GIFT program at the Pohang University of Science and Technology (Postech)
  3. National Natural Science Foundation of China [50805050]
  4. China Scholarship Council [2011615504]
  5. National Research Foundation of Korea(NRF) grant - Korea government(MSIP) [NRF-2014R1A2A1A11052889]

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The literature shows that shear fracture of advanced high strength steels (AHSS) is affected by strain hardening at large strain, as well as the temperature dependence of flow stress and strain hardening. The role of non-isotropic hardening, such as would be expected to be important in reverse strain paths as encountered during draw-bend testing or drawing sheet metal into forming dies, has been difficult to assess without a practical constitutive model combining temperature-dependence and non-isotropic hardening capabilities. Such a model has been developed and implemented in Abaqus Standard via the UMAT subroutine. In order to apply and test the constitutive implementation, the material model was fit using alternate parameter-identification procedures starting from compression-tension (CT) data: 1) fit directly from reverse-path, CT data, and 2) fit indirectly, by combining the direct CT data plus extrapolated data at larger strains where the extrapolation uses verified large-strain monotonic hardening character. The resulting material models were used to simulate draw-bend fracture (DBF) tests for six AHSS. The results show that the indirect method improves the predictions of shear fracture significantly, allowing accurate predictions. It was also shown that the influence of non-isotropic hardening aspects are not critical to accurate predictions as long as the high-strain strain hardening is reproduced accurately. These results suggest a practical and effective method for extending measured tensile hardening to otherwise unattainable strains based on the constant ratio (a in the H/V model) of power-law and saturation-stress strain hardening at a given temperature. The success of this approach suggests that a is a material constant (describing the fundamental strain-hardening character) that depends on temperature but is unaffected by the details of transient hardening following abrupt path changes. Furthermore, the essentially transient nature of hardening following path changes is supported. (C) 2015 Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved.

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