Determination of Microstructure-Based Constitutive Models Using Temperature Rise Measurements During Orthogonal Cutting

The Minerals, Metals and Materials Society
Juan Camilo Osorio Sepideh Abolghasem Juan Pablo Casas Rodriguez
Organization:
The Minerals, Metals and Materials Society
Pages:
11
File Size:
421 KB
Publication Date:
Mar 1, 2018

Abstract

Predicting flow stress at high strain-rates is a desirable practice for material behavior characterization. Sub-grain size has shown a huge influence in cutting forces and the workpiece surface finish determination during orthogonal cutting process. Hence, a prediction of flow stress as a function of thermomechanical conditions and sub-grain size is of great important which is studied in this work for OFHC copper. The principal thermomechanical conditions being strain, strain-rate and the accompanying temperature rise are characterized in Plane Strain Machining (PSM) and the resulting microstructure, sub-grain size, is quantified. Material maximum flow stress (a constitutive model) as a function of thermomechanical conditions and sub-grain size is predicted considering a saturated state in microstructure using optimization algorithms for reaching the validated temperature rise based on modified Hahn’s model. Evaluated models suggest a major influence of strain-rate and dislocation in temperature rise estimation and flow stress prediction leading to consideration of mechanical failure phenomenon involved in machining-based manufacturing processes.
Citation

APA: Juan Camilo Osorio Sepideh Abolghasem Juan Pablo Casas Rodriguez  (2018)  Determination of Microstructure-Based Constitutive Models Using Temperature Rise Measurements During Orthogonal Cutting

MLA: Juan Camilo Osorio Sepideh Abolghasem Juan Pablo Casas Rodriguez Determination of Microstructure-Based Constitutive Models Using Temperature Rise Measurements During Orthogonal Cutting. The Minerals, Metals and Materials Society, 2018.

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