Published January 1, 2016 | Version v1
Journal article Open

A Microstructure-Sensitive Model for Simulating the Impact Response of a High-Manganese Austenitic Steel

  • 1. Koc Univ, AMG, Dept Mech Engn, TR-34450 Istanbul, Turkey

Description

Microstructurally informed macroscopic impact response of a high-manganese austenitic steel was modeled through incorporation of the viscoplastic self-consistent (VPSC) crystal plasticity model into the ANSYS LS-DYNA nonlinear explicit finite-element (FE) frame. Voce hardening flow rule, capable of modeling plastic anisotropy in microstructures, was utilized in the VPSC crystal plasticity model to predict the micromechanical response of the material, which was calibrated based on experimentally measured quasi-static uniaxial tensile deformation response and initially measured textures. Specifically, hiring calibrated Voce parameters in VPSC, a modified material response was predicted employing local velocity gradient tensors obtained from the initial FE analyses as a new boundary condition for loading state. The updated micromechanical response of the material was then integrated into the macroscale material model by calibrating the Johnson-Cook (JC) constitutive relationship and the corresponding damage parameters. Consequently, we demonstrate the role of geometrically necessary multi-axial stress state for proper modeling of the impact response of polycrystalline metals and validate the presented approach by experimentally and numerically analyzing the deformation response of the Hadfield steel (HS) under impact loading.

Files

bib-2e27ef01-98ae-44d5-8776-09598709f5dc.txt

Files (228 Bytes)

Name Size Download all
md5:ef8679ee976bfaf2fc4f9a9fa6a7fbc0
228 Bytes Preview Download