Abstract
In this paper is presented a systematic experimental investigation of the mechanical response of polycrystalline commercially pure molybdenum (Mo). It was established that the material has ductility in tension at 10-5/s and that the failure strain is strongly dependent on the orientation. A specimen taken along the rolling direction sustains large axial strains (20%), while a specimen cut at an angle of 45° to the rolling direction could only sustain 5% strain. Irrespective of the loading orientation the yield stress in uniaxial compression is larger than in uniaxial tension. While in tension the material has a strong anisotropy in Lankford coefficients, in uniaxial compression it displays weak strain-anisotropy. An elastic- plastic orthotropic model that accounts for all the specificities of the plastic deformation of the material was developed. Validation of the model was done through comparison with data on notched specimens. Quantitative agreement with both global and local strain fields was obtained.
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CITATION STYLE
Kleiser, G., Revil-Baudard, B., Cazacu, O., & Pasiliao, C. L. (2016). Constitutive modeling and simulation at room-temperature deformation and failure of polycrystalline molybdenum. In Journal of Physics: Conference Series (Vol. 734). Institute of Physics Publishing. https://doi.org/10.1088/1742-6596/734/3/032110
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