Abstract
Plastic flow behaviour of low carbon steel has been studied at room temperature during tensile deformation by varying the initial strain rate of 3.3 × 10-4 s-1 to a final strain rate ranging from 1.33 × 10-3 s-1 to 2 × 10-3 s -1 at a fixed engineering strain of 12 %. Haasen plot revealed that the mobile dislocation density remained almost invariant at the juncture where there was a sudden increase in stress with a change in strain rate and the plastic flow was solely dependent on the velocity of mobile dislocations. In that critical regime, the variation of stress with time was fitted with a Boltzmann type Sigmoid function. The increase in stress was found to increase with final strain rate and the time elapsed in attaining these stress values showed a decreasing trend. Both of these parameters saturated asymptotically at a higher final strain rate. © Indian Academy of Sciences.
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Ray, A., Barat, P., Mukherjee, P., Sarkar, A., & Bandyopadhyay, S. K. (2007). Effect of transient change in strain rate on plastic flow behaviour of low carbon steel. Bulletin of Materials Science, 30(1), 69–71. https://doi.org/10.1007/s12034-007-0012-y
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