Deformation mechanisms in superplastic AA5083 materials
Authors
Kulas, Mary-Anne
Green, W. Paul
Taleff, Eric M.
Krajewski, Paul E.
McNelley, Terry R.
Advisors
Second Readers
Subjects
Date of Issue
2005-05
Date
Publisher
Language
Abstract
The plastic deformation of seven 5083 commercial aluminum materials, produced from five different
alloy heats, are evaluated under conditions of interest for superplastic and quick-plastic forming.
Two mechanisms are shown to govern plastic deformation in AA5083 over the strain rates, strains,
and temperatures of interest for these forming technologies: grain-boundary-sliding (GBS) creep and
solute- drag (SD) creep. Quantitative analysis of stress transients following rate changes clearly
differentiates between GBS and SD creep and offers conclusive proof that SD creep dominates
deformation at fast strain rates and low temperature. Furthermore, stress transients following
strain-rate changes under SD creep are observed to decay exponentially with strain. A new graphical
construction is proposed for the analysis and prediction of creep transients. This construction
predicts the relative size of creep transients under SD creep from the relative size of changes in
an applied strain rate or stress. This construction reveals the relative size of creep transients
under SD creep to be independent of temperature; temperature dependence resides in the
“steady-state” creep behavior to which transients are related.
Type
Article
Description
Series/Report No
Department
Mechanical Engineering
Organization
Naval Postgraduate School (U.S.)
Identifiers
NPS Report Number
Sponsors
General Motors Corporation
Funding
Format
13 p.
Citation
M.-A. Kular, W.P. GReen, E.M. Taleff, P.E. Karjewski, T.R. McNelley, "Deformatin mechanisms in superplastic AA5083 materials," Metallurgical and Materials Transaction A.,v.36A, (May 2005), p. 1249-1261.
Distribution Statement
Rights
This publication is a work of the U.S. Government as defined in Title 17, United States Code, Section 101. Copyright protection is not available for this work in the United States.
