Study on the Microscopic Mechanism of Axle Steel EA4T during Uniaxial Cyclic Deformation Process
Abstract
:1. Introduction
2. Macroscopic Deformation Experiment of Axle Steel EA4T
3. Microscopic Mechanism of Axle Steel EA4T during Cyclic Deformation
3.1. Dislocation Evolution Law in Uniaxial Tension
- (1)
- when the uniaxial tensile deformation is 5%, the main dislocation configuration can be observed by the Transmission Electron Microscope (TEM) as dislocation tangles, as shown in Figure 7a. Meanwhile, dislocation pileup can be observed at the grain boundaries, as shown in Figure 7b. When the deformation of uniaxial tension reaches 8%, the main dislocation configuration is high-density dislocation tangle, as shown in Figure 8a, where a small portion of grains have a tendency to form dislocation walls, as shown in Figure 8b.
- (2)
- During the tensile deformation, dislocations multiply continuously through a typical mechanism, and the dislocation density significantly increases with the increase in tensile plastic deformation. The dislocation configuration gradually develops from low-density dislocation configurations, such as dislocation lines and dislocation pileups, to high-density dislocation configurations, such as severe dislocation tangles and dislocation walls;
- (3)
- The plastic deformation of polycrystalline metal is inhomogeneous at the grain scale, taking the tensile deformation of 5% as an example. Specifically, dislocation tangles and dislocation pileup can be observed in most grains, as shown in Figure 7a,b. However, in a small part of grains, only dislocation lines or dislocation-free zones can be observed, as shown in Figure 7c. This is mainly caused by different crystal orientations, which can be seen in references [30,33].
3.2. The Evolution Law of Dislocations during Ratcheting Deformation
- (1)
- when the number of cycles is 30, the ratcheting deformation is 1.93%, and the main dislocation configurations of axle steel EA4T are dislocation tangles and dislocation pileup, as shown in Figure 9;
- (2)
- when the cycle number is 110 cycles, the ratcheting deformation is 4.53%. The main dislocation configuration of axle steel EA4T is dislocation pileup, and some crystals generate severe dislocation tangles, as shown in Figure 10a; The dislocation cellular structure is not obvious, and very few grains have early sub-grains, as shown in Figure 10b.
- (3)
- During the uniaxial ratcheting deformation of axle steel EA4T, dislocations are also constantly proliferating. The dislocation density gradually increases with the increase in the number of cycles and ratcheting strain, and a small portion of grains will form early subgrains in the later stage of the ratcheting deformation experiment.
- (1)
- At the first stage and early second stage of ratcheting strain, i.e., when the number of cycles is less than 30, the main dislocation configuration of axle steel EA4T has evolved from discrete dislocation lines to complex dislocation configuration, such as dislocation tangles and dislocation pileup, with a rapid increase in dislocation density. The increase in dislocation density and the formation of complex dislocation configurations during the initial stage of ratcheting deformation improved the degree of hardening of axle steel EA4T, resulting in a gradual decrease in ratcheting strain rate during the first stage.
- (2)
- At the second stage of ratcheting strain, i.e., when the cycle of ratcheting strain is less than 110, although the dislocation density of axle steel EA4T increases, its main dislocation configuration is relatively stable and still forms dislocation tangles, resulting in a constant ratcheting strain rate at the second stage. However, the dislocation density in the second stage of the ratcheting strain is greater than that in the first stage, so the ratcheting strain rate in the second stage is smaller than that in the first stage.
3.3. The Evolution Law of Dislocations during Strain Cycling
- (1)
- During the strain cycling process, the rate of dislocation multiplication is very fast. When the number of strain cycles is 50, the main dislocation configuration of axle steel EA4T is high-density dislocation tangles, as shown in Figure 11a. Dislocation walls with a tendency to form dislocation cells can be observed in certain grains, as shown in Figure 11b.
- (2)
- (3)
- During the strain cycling of axle steel EA4T, the dislocation density gradually increases with the increase in the number of cycles. The rate of dislocation multiplication during the strain cycling is higher than that of dislocations during uniaxial ratcheting deformation. The dislocation configuration gradually forms a high-density inhomogeneous dislocation configuration from a low-density dislocation configuration, and finally tends to form a stable subgrain structure, similar to the stable dislocation configuration of body centered cubic polycrystalline 20 carbon steel [30,32].
4. Conclusions
- Axle steel EA4T exhibits cyclic softening characteristics in strain-controlled cycling experiments, that is, the responsive stress amplitude will gradually decrease with the increase in the number of cycles. At the same time, the rate of cyclic softening of axle steel EA4T gradually decreases with the number of cycles, and there is no saturation phenomenon of cyclic softening within the maximum cycle set in this experiment. The ratcheting strain of axle steel EA4T increases with the increase in cycling cycles during asymmetric stress cycling. According to the evolution trend of uniaxial ratcheting strain rate, the evolution curve of uniaxial ratcheting strain of axle steel EA4T can be divided into three stages: in the first stage, the ratcheting strain rate rapidly decreases from large to small with the number of cycles, while in the second stage, the ratcheting strain rate remains constant. In the third stage, the ratcheting strain rate gradually increases, and the material enters the stage of instability and failure.
- The dislocation evolution law of axle steel EA4T during the uniaxial tensile experiment, symmetrical strain cycling, and the ratcheting deformation experiment is basically the same, and the dislocation density increases with the increase in plastic deformation and the number of cycles. The dislocation configuration gradually develops from low-density dislocation configurations such as dislocation lines and dislocation pileups to high-density dislocation configurations such as severe dislocation tangles and dislocation walls. A small portion of the grains will form early subgrains in the later stage of the ratcheting deformation experiment, and a large number of subgrains can be observed in the later stage of the strain cycling experiment. The rate of dislocation multiplication during strain cycling is faster than that during uniaxial ratcheting deformation.
- Based on the observed dislocation configuration evolution, the microscopic mechanism of the uniaxial ratcheting evolution of body centered cubic axle steel EA4T can be qualitatively explained as follows: at the first stage and early second stage of ratcheting strain, the main dislocation configuration of axle steel EA4T has evolved from discrete dislocation lines to complex dislocation configuration, such as dislocation tangles and dislocation pileup. The increase in dislocation density and the formation of complex dislocation configurations during the initial stage of ratcheting deformation improved the degree of hardening of axle steel EA4T, resulting in a gradual decrease in ratcheting strain rate during the first stage. At the second stage of ratcheting strain, although the dislocation density of axle steel EA4T increases, its main dislocation configuration is relatively stable and still forms dislocation tangles, resulting in a constant ratcheting strain rate at the second stage. However, the dislocation density in the second stage of the ratcheting strain is greater than that in the first stage, so the ratcheting strain rate in the second stage is smaller than that in the first stage.
Author Contributions
Funding
Data Availability Statement
Conflicts of Interest
References
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C | Mn | Si | Cr | Mo | Ni | V | S | P | Cu |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
0.22~0.29 | 0.5~0.8 | 0.15~0.40 | 0.90~1.20 | 0.15~0.3 | 0.3 | 0.06 | 0.015 | 0.02 | 0.3 |
Experimental Conditions | Number | Experimental Conditions | Loading Rate | Number of Cycles |
---|---|---|---|---|
Uniaxial tensile experiment | 1 2 | Tension to 5% Tension to 8% | 2 × 10−3/s 2 × 10−3/s | |
Symmetrical strain cycling experiment | 3 4 | ±0.7% ±0.7% | 2 × 10−3/s 2 × 10−3/s | 50 Cycle 300 Cycle |
Uniaxial ratcheting deformation experiment | 5 6 | 75 ± 475 MPa 75 ± 475 MPa | 50 MPa/s 50 MPa/s | 30 Cycle 110 Cycle |
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Ren, X.; Yang, S.; Zhao, W.; Wen, G. Study on the Microscopic Mechanism of Axle Steel EA4T during Uniaxial Cyclic Deformation Process. Metals 2023, 13, 1379. https://doi.org/10.3390/met13081379
Ren X, Yang S, Zhao W, Wen G. Study on the Microscopic Mechanism of Axle Steel EA4T during Uniaxial Cyclic Deformation Process. Metals. 2023; 13(8):1379. https://doi.org/10.3390/met13081379
Chicago/Turabian StyleRen, Xuehong, Shaopu Yang, Wenjie Zhao, and Guilin Wen. 2023. "Study on the Microscopic Mechanism of Axle Steel EA4T during Uniaxial Cyclic Deformation Process" Metals 13, no. 8: 1379. https://doi.org/10.3390/met13081379
APA StyleRen, X., Yang, S., Zhao, W., & Wen, G. (2023). Study on the Microscopic Mechanism of Axle Steel EA4T during Uniaxial Cyclic Deformation Process. Metals, 13(8), 1379. https://doi.org/10.3390/met13081379