Papers - Temperature-gradient Studies on Tempering Reactions of Quenched High carbou Steels (T. P. 923)

The American Institute of Mining, Metallurgical, and Petroleum Engineers
Charles R. Austin B. S. Norris
Organization:
The American Institute of Mining, Metallurgical, and Petroleum Engineers
Pages:
23
File Size:
2738 KB
Publication Date:
Jan 1, 1938

Abstract

The stresses which initiate deformation processes in metals are fundamentally important in the study of the mechanical properties of metals. A point of inflection in the load-elongation curves obtained for single crystals' has been rather too readily interpreted as a true yield point, and the critical resolved shearing stress on the plane of slip taken as a material constant. Even early work showed that the stress at this point varies with rate of loading, but it has not been generally appreciated that creep tests under static loads alone are suited for determining the existence or nonexistence of a yield point.* It has now been shown by Miller that single crystals of zinc3 when loaded statically begin to yield at loads too small to measure; as a result there is no case now known, apart from that cited in the present paper, in which a true critical stress for yielding has been demonstrated for single crystals of metals. The case of iron has especial interest: the existence of an upper and lower yield point and of an elongation at the yield point in ordinary iron and steel marks this substance as unusual, though the effects have been found to a very minor degree in other metals and alloys. $ Most alloys do not show such marked phenomena when appreciable yielding begins, and accordingly modern practice is to speak of the yield strength of such materials, a stress read from the load-elongation curve after elongation has begun, rather than yield point. The special behavior of iron suggests that it is more likely that single crystals of iron should have a true yield point than other metals. The study of the mechanical properties of metals and alloys requires a determination of the crystallographic mechanism of deformation, wlletller deformation proceeds by slip, twinning, or cleavage, or a combination of these, and a determination of the stresses that induce these modes of deformation. With this information, a study of the rates of work-
Citation

APA: Charles R. Austin B. S. Norris  (1938)  Papers - Temperature-gradient Studies on Tempering Reactions of Quenched High carbou Steels (T. P. 923)

MLA: Charles R. Austin B. S. Norris Papers - Temperature-gradient Studies on Tempering Reactions of Quenched High carbou Steels (T. P. 923). The American Institute of Mining, Metallurgical, and Petroleum Engineers, 1938.

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