Cyclic behaviour concerning the response of material subjected to tension levelling
β Scribed by J.W Morris; S.J Hardy; A.W Lees; J.T Thomas
- Publisher
- Elsevier Science
- Year
- 2000
- Tongue
- English
- Weight
- 305 KB
- Volume
- 22
- Category
- Article
- ISSN
- 0142-1123
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β¦ Synopsis
Tension levelling is employed in cold steel strip manufacturing to guarantee that flat material is provided for shape-critical applications. The loading system of the process leads to a corresponding [very] low cycle fatigue stress-strain history being applied to surface and sub-surface sections of the material. In this paper, results are presented from a series of low cycle fatigue tests (in the crack-free phase) under constant strain amplitude control for a number of strain amplitudes, typical of those found in levelling applications. The results for the tests reported here suggest that a mixed mode work hardening process is present, with the application of a Bauschinger effect resulting in a closed hysteresis loop on completion of the first cycle. All tests showed that the material gradually work softened under the cyclic loads imposed. Strain-amplitude dependent work hardening, however, was observed in some early cycles.
π SIMILAR VOLUMES
A plane-strain upper bound limit load solution for bi-material welded joints subject tension is found. It is assumed that each material obeys Hill's orthotropic yield criterion and one of the principal axes of orthotropy coincides with the tensile direction. A crack of arbitrary length is located at