Large Deformation Behavior of High Strength Steel under Extreme Loading Conditions: High Temperature and High Strain Rate Experiments and Modeling

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Abstract

Plasticity and fracture experiments are carried out on flat smooth and notched tensile specimens extracted from DP800 steel sheets. A split Hopkinson pressure bar testing system equipped with a load inversion device is utilized to reach high strain rates. Temperature dependent experiments ranging from 20°C to 300°C are performed at quasi-static strain rates. The material exposes a monotonic strain hardening behaviour with a non-monotonic temperature dependency. The rate-independent material behaviour at room-temperature is described with a non-associated Hill'48 plasticity model and an Swift-Voce strain hardening. A machine learning based model is used multiplicatively to capture the rate and temperature responses. A good agreement between measured and simulated force-displacement curves as well as local surface is obtained. The loading paths to fracture are then extracted to facilitate further development of a temperature dependent fracture initiation model.

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Li, X., Roth, C. C., & Mohr, D. (2018). Large Deformation Behavior of High Strength Steel under Extreme Loading Conditions: High Temperature and High Strain Rate Experiments and Modeling. In EPJ Web of Conferences (Vol. 183). EDP Sciences. https://doi.org/10.1051/epjconf/201818301053

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