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The Important Role Played by High-Temperature Tensile Testing in the Representation of Minimum Creep Rates Using S-Shaped Curve Models
Metallurgical and Materials Transactions A
Swansea University Author: Mark Evans
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DOI (Published version): 10.1007/s11661-023-07202-w
Abstract
It is important to characterize the creep life of materials used in power plants and aeroengines. This paper illustrates the important role played by a material’s tensile strength in enabling accurate creep property representations to be made. It also shows that published high-temperature tensile st...
Published in: | Metallurgical and Materials Transactions A |
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ISSN: | 1073-5623 1543-1940 |
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URI: | https://cronfa.swan.ac.uk/Record/cronfa64469 |
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v2 64469 2023-09-08 The Important Role Played by High-Temperature Tensile Testing in the Representation of Minimum Creep Rates Using S-Shaped Curve Models 7720f04c308cf7a1c32312058780d20c 0000-0003-2056-2396 Mark Evans Mark Evans true false 2023-09-08 MTLS It is important to characterize the creep life of materials used in power plants and aeroengines. This paper illustrates the important role played by a material’s tensile strength in enabling accurate creep property representations to be made. It also shows that published high-temperature tensile strength values are not always suitable for use in certain creep models due to its strain rate dependency. To deal with the absence of such suitable date on tensile strength, this paper estimates such values directly from minimum creep rate data. When this technique is applied to models that represent the relationship between minimum creep rates and normalized (with respect to tensile strength) stress using S-shaped curves, an improvement in the fit to data on 2.25Cr–1Mo steel was observed. The findings suggest an important need for future research into the most appropriate strain rates to be used in high-temperature tensile testing when the purpose is to use the resulting tensile strength values for use in creep modeling. Journal Article Metallurgical and Materials Transactions A Springer Science and Business Media LLC 1073-5623 1543-1940 Parametric creep models, high temperature tensile testing, creep testing, creep modelling 0 0 0 0001-01-01 10.1007/s11661-023-07202-w http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/s11661-023-07202-w COLLEGE NANME Materials Science and Engineering COLLEGE CODE MTLS Swansea University 2023-10-09T16:27:03.8853551 2023-09-08T08:32:23.4380281 Faculty of Science and Engineering School of Engineering and Applied Sciences - Materials Science and Engineering Mark Evans 0000-0003-2056-2396 1 64469__28736__f378ad8b0ccf4e92a0df5ab9b89dcf6f.pdf 64469.VOR.pdf 2023-10-09T16:24:15.5097937 Output 966603 application/pdf Version of Record true © The Author(s) 2023. Distributed under the terms of a Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 License (CC BY 4.0). true eng https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/ |
title |
The Important Role Played by High-Temperature Tensile Testing in the Representation of Minimum Creep Rates Using S-Shaped Curve Models |
spellingShingle |
The Important Role Played by High-Temperature Tensile Testing in the Representation of Minimum Creep Rates Using S-Shaped Curve Models Mark Evans |
title_short |
The Important Role Played by High-Temperature Tensile Testing in the Representation of Minimum Creep Rates Using S-Shaped Curve Models |
title_full |
The Important Role Played by High-Temperature Tensile Testing in the Representation of Minimum Creep Rates Using S-Shaped Curve Models |
title_fullStr |
The Important Role Played by High-Temperature Tensile Testing in the Representation of Minimum Creep Rates Using S-Shaped Curve Models |
title_full_unstemmed |
The Important Role Played by High-Temperature Tensile Testing in the Representation of Minimum Creep Rates Using S-Shaped Curve Models |
title_sort |
The Important Role Played by High-Temperature Tensile Testing in the Representation of Minimum Creep Rates Using S-Shaped Curve Models |
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7720f04c308cf7a1c32312058780d20c |
author_id_fullname_str_mv |
7720f04c308cf7a1c32312058780d20c_***_Mark Evans |
author |
Mark Evans |
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Mark Evans |
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Journal article |
container_title |
Metallurgical and Materials Transactions A |
institution |
Swansea University |
issn |
1073-5623 1543-1940 |
doi_str_mv |
10.1007/s11661-023-07202-w |
publisher |
Springer Science and Business Media LLC |
college_str |
Faculty of Science and Engineering |
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facultyofscienceandengineering |
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Faculty of Science and Engineering |
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facultyofscienceandengineering |
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Faculty of Science and Engineering |
department_str |
School of Engineering and Applied Sciences - Materials Science and Engineering{{{_:::_}}}Faculty of Science and Engineering{{{_:::_}}}School of Engineering and Applied Sciences - Materials Science and Engineering |
url |
http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/s11661-023-07202-w |
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description |
It is important to characterize the creep life of materials used in power plants and aeroengines. This paper illustrates the important role played by a material’s tensile strength in enabling accurate creep property representations to be made. It also shows that published high-temperature tensile strength values are not always suitable for use in certain creep models due to its strain rate dependency. To deal with the absence of such suitable date on tensile strength, this paper estimates such values directly from minimum creep rate data. When this technique is applied to models that represent the relationship between minimum creep rates and normalized (with respect to tensile strength) stress using S-shaped curves, an improvement in the fit to data on 2.25Cr–1Mo steel was observed. The findings suggest an important need for future research into the most appropriate strain rates to be used in high-temperature tensile testing when the purpose is to use the resulting tensile strength values for use in creep modeling. |
published_date |
0001-01-01T16:27:05Z |
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1779292150461104128 |
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11.016235 |