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Strain Hardening and Annealing
Chapter 7 – 4th Edition Chapter 8 – 5th Edition
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Strain Hardening in Metals
When a piece of metal is deformed, the dislocations run into each other This traffic jam increases the material’s strength Deforming a piece of metal also actually increases the number of dislocations This increases the strength too!!
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Tensile Test You can understand this better by relating it to the results of the tensile test.
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John D Russ – Materials Science – A Multimedia Approach
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Try it!! Strain harden a piece of copper tubing.
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Effects of Strain Hardening
Yield Strength goes up Tensile Strength goes up Ductility goes down The material becomes brittle
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©2003 Brooks/Cole, a division of Thomson Learning, Inc
©2003 Brooks/Cole, a division of Thomson Learning, Inc. Thomson Learning™ is a trademark used herein under license.
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Strain Hardening Coefficient
Strain Hardening Coefficient is a measure of how much the metal can be strengthened by strain hardening It needs to have some ductility to be strain hardened. ©2003 Brooks/Cole, a division of Thomson Learning, Inc. Thomson Learning™ is a trademark used herein under license.
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n is the slope of the PLASTIC portion of the curve, when graphed on a logarithmic scale
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Log plot of the plastic portion of a tensile test
Slope=n Log True Stress, σ K Log(σ) = Log(K) + n Log(ε) 0.001 0.010 0.100 1.0 Log True Strain, ε
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Effect of Crystal Structure
HCP metals are already brittle Little strain hardening is possible Strain hardening coefficient around 0.05 BCC metals are less brittle than HCP Some strain hardening is possible N around 0.15 FCC metals are ductile Strain hardening is easy N around 0.5
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Frank-Read Source Strain hardening actually increases the strength of a material PAST its original tensile strength Why? Additional dislocations are formed as dislocations run into point defects
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Strain Hardening – The effect of dislocation generation
Yield Point Tensile Strength
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From “Materials Science – A Multimedia Approach”, by John Russ
Copper 30% zinc alloy
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Frank-Read Source Point Defect Dislocation
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Frank-Read Source
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Frank-Read Source Before deformation a typical dislocation density is about 106 cm of dislocation per cm3 of metal After strain hardening it may increase to as much as 1012 cm per cm3 of metal
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Strain Hardening in Polymers
When you pull on a polymer, the chains line up Van der Waal bonds form between the chains The polymer becomes stronger Try it with a 6-pack ring!! The mechanism for strain hardening in plastics is different from the mechanism in metals
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©2003 Brooks/Cole, a division of Thomson Learning, Inc
©2003 Brooks/Cole, a division of Thomson Learning, Inc. Thomson Learning™ is a trademark used herein under license.
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PET Bottles and Preforms
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Strain Hardening in Ceramics?
Ceramics are already brittle – so strain hardening is not usually possible Ceramics break because of flaws – the mechanism of deformation is different Annealing ceramics causes grain growth May or may not be bad
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Back to Metals Cold Work
There is only a certain amount you can deform a material before it breaks Cold work is strain hardening measured in % - The percent change in cross sectional area of the material Different materials have varying % allowable cold work
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Wire Drawing Initial diameter Final diameter d0 F d
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Rod Deformation of a rod (or a piece of wire)
Initial cross sectional area minus Final cross sectional area Over the initial cross sectional area
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All times 100 of course
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Copper is often drawn into wire
Copper rod feeding into drawing machine
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Plate Rolling Initial thickness Final thickness h0 h
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Cold Rolling Metal is often rolled into sheets from thicker stock
The width of the sheet is usually kept the same, and only the thickness varies
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Cold Rolled Steel
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Annealing is a heat treatment
Cold Work What if you want to deform the sample more than is “possible? For example, what if you want to draw a piece of wire, from a rod of copper? You can anneal the material, and “undo” the strain hardening Annealing is a heat treatment
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Problem Propose a series of steps to reduce a rod of copper-zinc alloy from 1 “ diameter to .1”diameter. The maximum cold work allowable for this copper zinc alloy is 85%. You will have to draw the copper, then anneal it several times.
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One solution Draw the 1” rod to 0.5” Anneal
The maximum cold work is not exceeded
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Final Step Draw the 0.125” rod to 0.1” The final cold work is 36%
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Problem What if you want a certain tensile strength in your final product? Look at one of the graphs of properties vs. cold work from the book. Make sure that your final cold work step is the right size to give you the properties you want.
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From “Materials Science”, by John Russ
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Cold Work is Anisotropic
When you deform a piece of metal you elongate the grain. Slip occurs only in the favored directions You strengthen the material in the direction it is deformed, but properties in the other directions do not change as much.
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The Science and Engineering of Materials - Askeland
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©2003 Brooks/Cole, a division of Thomson Learning, Inc
©2003 Brooks/Cole, a division of Thomson Learning, Inc. Thomson Learning™ is a trademark used herein under license.
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©2003 Brooks/Cole, a division of Thomson Learning, Inc
©2003 Brooks/Cole, a division of Thomson Learning, Inc. Thomson Learning™ is a trademark used herein under license.
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Cold Working Wire When you draw wire, you strengthen in the longitudinal direction It is not strengthened axially This makes it easy to cut, but hard to break by pulling on it!!
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Annealing You can’t just haphazardly heat up a piece of metal to “undo” the strain hardening It’s a temperature dependent process
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Annealing Recovery Recrystallization Grain Growth
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Recovery or Stress Relief
If you only add a small amount of thermal energy (heat it up a little) the dislocations rearrange themselves into networks to relieve residual stresses Polyganized subgrain structure Ductility is improved Strength does not change
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The Science and Engineering of Materials - Askeland
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Three EBSD maps of the stored energy in an Al-Mg-Mn alloy after exposure to increasing recrystallization temperature. The volume fraction of recrystallized grains (light) increases with temperature for a given time.
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Sometimes Residual Stresses are good
Shot Peening Tempered Glass Side and Rear Windows in Cars
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Recrystallization Add more heat, and new grains start to grow at the grain boundaries. The new grains have not been strain hardened The recrystallized metal is ductile and has low strength
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The Science and Engineering of Materials - Askeland
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Grain Growth If you keep the metal hot too long, or heat it up too much, the grains become large Usually not good Low strength Also brittle
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The Science and Engineering of Materials - Askeland
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Check out the CD animations
Try the quiz on the CD!! On the next page explore how properties change during the annealing process The whole process depends not only on the temperature, but on how long you keep the metal hot.
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John Russ Materials Science – A Multimedia Approach
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Sometimes annealing happens by itself!!
Is cold working a good way to strengthen a metal used at high temperatures? What about a tungsten filament in a light bulb?
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SEM of a tungsten filament
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How hot is hot? Most metals have a recrystallization temperature equal to about 40% of the melting point measured in Kelvin
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For Example If a metal melts at 1000K, it’s recrystallization temperature is approximately 400K If the metal is exposed to temperatures above the recrystallization temperature while in service, the strengthening achieved with cold work will be eliminated
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Factors Contributing to Recrystallization Temperature
Melting Point Original Grain Size Amount of Cold Work Pure metals recrystallize at lower temperatures than alloys Time at temperature
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Typical Recrystallization Temperatures
Metal Melting Temperature 0C Recrystallization Temperature 0C Sn 232 -4 Pb 327 Zn 420 10 Al 660 150 Mg 650 200 Ag 962 Cu 1085 Fe 1538 450 Ni 1453 600 Mo 2610 900 W 3410 1200 These metals recrystallize below room temperature – so cold work is not possible under normal conditions The Science and Engineering of Materials - Askeland
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What should you do if cold working isn’t applicable?
Try solid solution strengthening Try hot working
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Hot Working Shape the metal while it is hot.
Above the recrystallization temperature Blacksmiths use a combination of hot work and cold work. Can not fine tune the final properties this way Dimensional control is hard Surface finishes may be hard to produce
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©2003 Brooks/Cole, a division of Thomson Learning, Inc
©2003 Brooks/Cole, a division of Thomson Learning, Inc. Thomson Learning™ is a trademark used herein under license. During hot working, the elongated anisotropic grains immediately recrystallize. If the hot-working temperature is properly controlled, the final hot-worked grain size can be very fine.
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Hot Rolling Steel
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What happens when you weld a cold worked piece of metal?
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Welding affects the surrounding material
An incomplete weld of a bike frame which failed. Apparent in the image is the bright weld material in the center, the surrounding lighter heat affected zone (HAZ), and dark outer unaffected base metal. Field of view is approximately 15 mm. Used by Permission of Ruth Kramer
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The following slides show the effect of cold working on various metals
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