Technical Papers and Discussions - Physical Metallurgy - Relative Triaxial Deformation Rates (Metals Tech., Sept. 1945, T. P. 1808, with discussion)

The American Institute of Mining, Metallurgical, and Petroleum Engineers
William Marsh Baldwin T. S. Howald A. W. Ross
Organization:
The American Institute of Mining, Metallurgical, and Petroleum Engineers
Pages:
28
File Size:
1164 KB
Publication Date:
Jan 1, 1946

Abstract

The related subjects of preferred orientation, directionality in physical properties, and earing tendencies of wrought metal strip have attracted the attention of metallurgists to such an extent that in the past 20 years hundreds of researches have been published on this one general problem. The anisotropy of tensile strength and elongation have been exhaustively studied in their relationship to the occurrence of ears in cups drawn from strip'-~O.~g and, to a lesser extent: yield strength7."-l7 and stress-strain curves'5 have been investigated. Despite the tremendous fund of knowledge thus accrued, no simple quantitative correlation of directionality and earing tendencies has yet been found. In a sense, this is not surprising. The formation of ears in a drawn cup clearly is a special phase of the general study of metal flow; in particular (as will be brought out in the course of this paper), ears are due to anistropy in the rates of deformation of the metal in the radial, circumferential, and "thickness" directions of the original blank. It would be difficult to effect a correlation between caring tendency and a property that may be completely independent of the flow of metal, or at best related to metal flow in an exceedingly complex fashion. Yet, it is this correlation that has been attempted; tensile strength and elongation are attributes of metal rupture. a phenomenon that has quite admirably been shown to be distinct from the phenomenon of metal flow,21 while yield strength and stress-strain
Citation

APA: William Marsh Baldwin T. S. Howald A. W. Ross  (1946)  Technical Papers and Discussions - Physical Metallurgy - Relative Triaxial Deformation Rates (Metals Tech., Sept. 1945, T. P. 1808, with discussion)

MLA: William Marsh Baldwin T. S. Howald A. W. Ross Technical Papers and Discussions - Physical Metallurgy - Relative Triaxial Deformation Rates (Metals Tech., Sept. 1945, T. P. 1808, with discussion). The American Institute of Mining, Metallurgical, and Petroleum Engineers, 1946.

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