Mechanisms Controlling Ductility Loss from Abrupt Strain Path Changes in a Low Carbon Steel

2021 
The effect of Strain Path Changes (SPCs) on the mechanical properties and crystal-level features of deformation for a single phase, ferritic steel has been investigated. SPCs were applied via a two-step deformation process, which included pre-straining via cold rolling, followed by uniaxial tension. The pre-strain magnitude and direction, as well as the tensile direction, varied between the specimens. The role of texture and micromechanics were examined in-situ, via Synchrotron X-Ray Diffraction (SXRD), and ex-situ, via Electron Backscatter Diffraction (EBSD). Abrupt strain paths (i.e. strain paths where the pre-strain and the subsequent loading directions differ; here they are orthogonal) result in a significant ductility reduction, becoming more prevalent for high pre-strain magnitudes. The macroscopic response, as well as the texture configuration were greatly dependent on the pre-strain direction but were insensitive to the direction of uniaxial tension. Increasing pre-strain magnitudes resulted in a stagnation of lattice strain hardening rates in all macroscopic directions and in a significant increase in the Geometrically Necessary Dislocation (GND) densities. This was vastly increased for specimens rolled perpendicular to the as-received prior rolling direction. No correlation was found between the GND density and the grain orientation, eliminating this as a controlling ductility factor for BCC ferrite. Instead, the initial texture, the texture developed in a subsequent pre-strain influences the density of dislocations accumulated in all grains, and ultimately determines ductility.
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