ISSN:2321-6212

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Study on uniaxial tensile and creep deformation of structural steel


Joint Event on 15th International Conference and Exhibition on Materials Science and Engineering & 3rd International Conference on Applied Crystallography

November 07-08, 2018 | Atlanta, USA

Rajkumar Singh, Madhuri Thombre, Suraj Prakash Toppo and Sagar Bapat

Bharat Forge Ltd., India

Posters & Accepted Abstracts: Res. Rev. J Mat. Sci

DOI: 10.4172/2321-6212-C8-036

Abstract

Creep resistant Ferritic-Martensitic steel is considered as a promising structural material for power plant applications. For such steels, intensive research have been carried out in the scientific world to understand the high-temperature deformation mechanism both through uniaxial Constant Strain Rate Test (CSRT) and Creep test at 0.3-0.5Tm. However, very few attempts were made to correlate the effective stress of CSRT with actual creep rate. The present work is an attempt to establish a relationship between these two. To characterize the stress exponent (n) and activation energy (Q) of F92 steel, experiments were carried out via Differential Strain Rate Test (DSRT) and CSRT between strain rate range of (10-5-10-3s-1) and temperatures (400-700⁰C). The estimated (n) and (Q) through CSRT were found to be 13 and 600kJ/mol, respectively. To rationalize high obtained values of n and Q, BMD model was used and rationalized values came to be 5 and 236�?±20kJ/mol, respectively. The values of n and Q were also obtained directly from DSRT and found to be 4�?±0.2 and 195�?±2kJ/mol, respectively, which are close to the values obtained from CSRT. These values reported being associated with the climb of edge dislocation deformation mechanism. The CSRT results were further analyzed for identified nâ�?�?4-6 to predict steady-state creep rate (�?­ss) for corresponding effective stress (Ï�?-Ï�?th) which is reported to be responsible stress for creep deformation and further validated by conducting creep test. Microstructural characterization of the samples was carried out under TEM and the metallurgical factors identified affecting the results.

Biography

E-mail:

rajkumar.singh@bharatforge.com