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Ductility

Ductility is a mechanical property commonly described as a material's amenability to drawing (e.g. into wire).[1] In materials science, ductility is defined by the degree to which a material can sustain plastic deformation under tensile stress before failure.[2][3] Ductility is an important consideration in engineering and manufacturing. It defines a material's suitability for certain manufacturing operations (such as cold working) and its capacity to absorb mechanical overload.[4] Some metals that are generally described as ductile include gold and copper, while platinum is the most ductile of all metals in pure form.[5] However, not all metals experience ductile failure as some can be characterized with brittle failure like cast iron. Polymers generally can be viewed as ductile materials as they typically allow for plastic deformation.[6]

Tensile test of an Al-Mg-Si alloy. The local necking and the cup and cone fracture surfaces are typical for ductile metals.
This tensile test of a nodular cast iron demonstrates low ductility.

Malleability, a similar mechanical property, is characterized by a material's ability to deform plastically without failure under compressive stress.[7][8] Historically, materials were considered malleable if they were amenable to forming by hammering or rolling.[1] Lead is an example of a material which is relatively malleable but not ductile.[5][9]

Materials science edit

 
Gold is extremely ductile. It can be drawn into a monatomic wire, and then stretched more before it breaks.[10]

Ductility is especially important in metalworking, as materials that crack, break or shatter under stress cannot be manipulated using metal-forming processes such as hammering, rolling, drawing or extruding. Malleable materials can be formed cold using stamping or pressing, whereas brittle materials may be cast or thermoformed.

High degrees of ductility occur due to metallic bonds, which are found predominantly in metals; this leads to the common perception that metals are ductile in general. In metallic bonds valence shell electrons are delocalized and shared between many atoms. The delocalized electrons allow metal atoms to slide past one another without being subjected to strong repulsive forces that would cause other materials to shatter.

The ductility of steel varies depending on the alloying constituents. Increasing the levels of carbon decreases ductility. Many plastics and amorphous solids, such as Play-Doh, are also malleable. The most ductile metal is platinum and the most malleable metal is gold.[11][12] When highly stretched, such metals distort via formation, reorientation and migration of dislocations and crystal twins without noticeable hardening.[13]

Quantification edit

Basic definitions edit

The quantities commonly used to define ductility in a tension test are relative elongation (in percent, sometimes denoted as  ) and reduction of area (sometimes denoted as  ) at fracture.[14] Fracture strain is the engineering strain at which a test specimen fractures during a uniaxial tensile test. Percent elongation, or engineering strain at fracture, can be written as:[15][16][17]

 

Percent reduction in area can be written as:[15][16][17]

 

where the area of concern is the cross-sectional area of the gauge of the specimen.

According to Shigley's Mechanical Engineering Design,[4] significant denotes about 5.0 percent elongation.

Effect of sample dimensions edit

An important point concerning the value of the ductility (nominal strain at failure) in a tensile test is that it commonly exhibits a dependence on sample dimensions. However, a universal parameter should exhibit no such dependence (and, indeed, there is no dependence for properties such as stiffness, yield stress and ultimate tensile strength). This occurs because the measured strain (displacement) at fracture commonly incorporates contributions from both the uniform deformation occurring up to the onset of necking and the subsequent deformation of the neck (during which there is little or no deformation in the rest of the sample). The significance of the contribution from neck development depends on the "aspect ratio" (length / diameter) of the gauge length, being greater when the ratio is low. This is a simple geometric effect, which has been clearly identified. There have been both experimental studies[18] and theoretical explorations[19][20][21][22] of the effect, mostly based on Finite Element Method (FEM) modelling. Nevertheless, it is not universally appreciated and, since the range of sample dimensions in common use is quite wide, it can lead to highly significant variations (by factors of up to 2 or 3) in ductility values obtained for the same material in different tests.

A more meaningful representation of ductility would be obtained by identifying the strain at the onset of necking, which should be independent of sample dimensions. This point can be difficult to identify on a (nominal) stress-strain curve, because the peak (representing the onset of necking) is often relatively flat. Moreover, some (brittle) materials fracture before the onset of necking, such that there is no peak. In practice, for many purposes it is preferable to carry out a different kind of test, designed to evaluate the toughness (energy absorbed during fracture), rather than use ductility values obtained in tensile tests.

In an absolute sense, "ductility" values are therefore virtually meaningless. The actual (true) strain in the neck at the point of fracture bears no direct relation to the raw number obtained from the nominal stress-strain curve; the true strain in the neck is often considerably higher. Also, the true stress at the point of fracture is usually higher than the apparent value according to the plot. The load often drops while the neck develops, but the sectional area in the neck is also dropping (more sharply), so the true stress there is rising. There is no simple way of estimating this value, since it depends on the geometry of the neck. While the true strain at fracture is a genuine indicator of "ductility", it cannot readily be obtained from a conventional tensile test.

The Reduction in Area (RA) is defined as the decrease in sectional area at the neck (usually obtained by measurement of the diameter at one or both of the fractured ends), divided by the original sectional area. It is sometimes stated that this is a more reliable indicator of the "ductility" than the elongation at failure (partly in recognition of the fact that the latter is dependent on the aspect ratio of the gauge length, although this dependence is far from being universally appreciated). There is something in this argument, but the RA is still some way from being a genuinely meaningful parameter. One objection is that it is not easy to measure accurately, particularly with samples that are not circular in section. Rather more fundamentally, it is affected by both the uniform plastic deformation that took place before necking and by the development of the neck. Furthermore, it is sensitive to exactly what happens in the latter stages of necking, when the true strain is often becoming very high and the behavior is of limited significance in terms of a meaningful definition of strength (or toughness). There has again been extensive study of this issue.[23][24][25]

Ductile–brittle transition temperature edit

 
Schematic appearance of round metal bars after tensile testing.
(a) Brittle fracture
(b) Ductile fracture
(c) Completely ductile fracture

Metals can undergo two different types of fractures: brittle fracture or ductile fracture. Failure propagation occurs faster in brittle materials due to the ability for ductile materials to undergo plastic deformation. Thus, ductile materials are able to sustain more stress due to their ability to absorb more energy prior to failure than brittle materials are. The plastic deformation results in the material following a modification of the Griffith equation, where the critical fracture stress increases due to the plastic work required to extend the crack adding to the work necessary to form the crack - work corresponding to the increase in surface energy that results from the formation of an addition crack surface.[26] The plastic deformation of ductile metals is important as it can be a sign of the potential failure of the metal. Yet, the point at which the material exhibits a ductile behavior versus a brittle behavior is not only dependent on the material itself but also on the temperature at which the stress is being applied to the material. The temperature where the material changes from brittle to ductile or vice versa is crucial for the design of load-bearing metallic products. The minimum temperature at which the metal transitions from a brittle behavior to a ductile behavior, or from a ductile behavior to a brittle behavior, is known as the ductile-brittle transition temperature (DBTT). Below the DBTT, the material will not be able to plastically deform, and the crack propagation rate increases rapidly leading to the material undergoing brittle failure rapidly. Furthermore, DBTT is important since, once a material is cooled below the DBTT, it has a much greater tendency to shatter on impact instead of bending or deforming (low temperature embrittlement). Thus, the DBTT indicates the temperature at which, as temperature decreases, a material's ability to deform in a ductile manner decreases and so the rate of crack propagation drastically increases. In other words, solids are very brittle at very low temperatures, and their toughness becomes much higher at elevated temperatures.

For more general applications, it is preferred to have a lower DBTT to ensure the material has a wider ductility range. This ensures that sudden cracks are inhibited so that failures in the metal body are prevented. It has been determined that the more slip systems a material has, the wider the range of temperatures ductile behavior is exhibited at. This is due to the slip systems allowing for more motion of dislocations when a stress is applied to the material. Thus, in materials with a lower amount of slip systems, dislocations are often pinned by obstacles leading to strain hardening, which increases the materials strength which makes the material more brittle. For this reason, FCC (face centered cubic) structures are ductile over a wide range of temperatures, BCC (body centered cubic) structures are ductile only at high temperatures, and HCP (hexagonal closest packed) structures are often brittle over wide ranges of temperatures. This leads to each of these structures having different performances as they approach failure (fatigue, overload, and stress cracking) under various temperatures, and shows the importance of the DBTT in selecting the correct material for a specific application. For example, zamak 3 exhibits good ductility at room temperature but shatters when impacted at sub-zero temperatures. DBTT is a very important consideration in selecting materials that are subjected to mechanical stresses. A similar phenomenon, the glass transition temperature, occurs with glasses and polymers, although the mechanism is different in these amorphous materials. The DBTT is also dependent on the size of the grains within the metal, as typically smaller grain size leads to an increase in tensile strength, resulting in an increase in ductility and decrease in the DBTT. This increase in tensile strength is due to the smaller grain sizes resulting in grain boundary hardening occurring within the material, where the dislocations require a larger stress to cross the grain boundaries and continue to propagate throughout the material. It has been shown that by continuing to refine ferrite grains to reduce their size, from 40 microns down to 1.3 microns, that it is possible to eliminate the DBTT entirely so that a brittle fracture never occurs in ferritic steel (as the DBTT required would be below absolute zero).[27]

In some materials, the transition is sharper than others and typically requires a temperature-sensitive deformation mechanism. For example, in materials with a body-centered cubic (bcc) lattice the DBTT is readily apparent, as the motion of screw dislocations is very temperature sensitive because the rearrangement of the dislocation core prior to slip requires thermal activation. This can be problematic for steels with a high ferrite content. This famously resulted in serious hull cracking in Liberty ships in colder waters during World War II, causing many sinkings. DBTT can also be influenced by external factors such as neutron radiation, which leads to an increase in internal lattice defects and a corresponding decrease in ductility and increase in DBTT.

The most accurate method of measuring the DBTT of a material is by fracture testing. Typically four-point bend testing at a range of temperatures is performed on pre-cracked bars of polished material. Two fracture tests are typically utilized to determine the DBTT of specific metals: the Charpy V-Notch test and the Izod test. The Charpy V-notch test determines the impact energy absorption ability or toughness of the specimen by measuring the potential energy difference resulting from the collision between a mass on a free-falling pendulum and the machined V-shaped notch in the sample, resulting in the pendulum breaking through the sample. The DBTT is determined by repeating this test over a variety of temperatures and noting when the resulting fracture changes to a brittle behavior which occurs when the absorbed energy is dramatically decreased. The Izod test is essentially the same as the Charpy test, with the only differentiating factor being the placement of the sample; In the former the sample is placed vertically, while in the latter the sample is placed horizontally with respect to the bottom of the base. [28]

For experiments conducted at higher temperatures, dislocation activity[clarification needed] increases. At a certain temperature, dislocations shield[clarification needed] the crack tip to such an extent that the applied deformation rate is not sufficient for the stress intensity at the crack-tip to reach the critical value for fracture (KiC). The temperature at which this occurs is the ductile–brittle transition temperature. If experiments are performed at a higher strain rate, more dislocation shielding is required to prevent brittle fracture, and the transition temperature is raised.[citation needed]

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ a b Brande, William Thomas (1853). A Dictionary of Science, Literature, and Art: Comprising the History, Description, and Scientific Principles of Every Branch of Human Knowledge : with the Derivation and Definition of All the Terms in General Use. Harper & Brothers. p. 369.
  2. ^ Kalpakjian, Serope, 1928- (1984). Manufacturing processes for engineering materials. Reading, Mass.: Addison-Wesley. p. 30. ISBN 0-201-11690-1. OCLC 9783323.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link) CS1 maint: numeric names: authors list (link)
  3. ^ "Ductility - What is Ductile Material". Nuclear Power. Retrieved 2020-11-14.
  4. ^ a b Budynas, Richard G. (2015). Shigley's Mechanical Engineering Design—10th ed. McGraw Hill. p. 233. ISBN 978-0-07-339820-4..
  5. ^ a b Chandler Roberts-Austen, William (1894). An Introduction to the Study of Metallurgy. London: C. Griffin. p. 16.
  6. ^ Ductility and its effect on material failure. The Engineering Archive. (n.d.). https://theengineeringarchive.com/material-science/page-ductility-material-failure.html
  7. ^ "Malleability - Malleable Materials". Nuclear Power. from the original on 2020-09-25. Retrieved 2020-11-14.
  8. ^ DOE FUNDAMENTALS HANDBOOK MATERIAL SCIENCE. Vol. 1, Module 2 – Properties of Metals. U.S. Department of Energy. January 1993. p. 25.
  9. ^ Rich, Jack C. (1988). The Materials and Methods of Sculpture. Courier Dover Publications. p. 129. ISBN 978-0-486-25742-6..
  10. ^ Masuda, Hideki (2016). "Combined Transmission Electron Microscopy – In situ Observation of the Formation Process and Measurement of Physical Properties for Single Atomic-Sized Metallic Wires". In Janecek, Milos; Kral, Robert (eds.). Modern Electron Microscopy in Physical and Life Sciences. InTech. doi:10.5772/62288. ISBN 978-953-51-2252-4. S2CID 58893669.
  11. ^ Vaccaro, John (2002) Materials handbook, Mc Graw-Hill handbooks, 15th ed.
  12. ^ Schwartz, M. (2002) CRC encyclopedia of materials parts and finishes, 2nd ed.
  13. ^ Lah, Che; Akmal, Nurul; Trigueros, Sonia (2019). "Synthesis and modelling of the mechanical properties of Ag, Au and Cu nanowires". Sci. Technol. Adv. Mater. 20 (1): 225–261. Bibcode:2019STAdM..20..225L. doi:10.1080/14686996.2019.1585145. PMC 6442207. PMID 30956731.
  14. ^ Dieter, G. (1986) Mechanical Metallurgy, McGraw-Hill, ISBN 978-0-07-016893-0
  15. ^ a b "Ductility Review - Strength Mechanics of Materials - Engineers Edge". www.engineersedge.com. Retrieved 2020-07-14.
  16. ^ a b Askeland, Donald R. (2016). "6-4 Properties Obtained from the Tensile Test". The science and engineering of materials. Wright, Wendelin J. (Seventh ed.). Boston, MA. p. 195. ISBN 978-1-305-07676-1. OCLC 903959750.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: location missing publisher (link)
  17. ^ a b Callister, William D. Jr. (2010). "6.6 Tensile Properties". Materials science and engineering : an introduction. Rethwisch, David G. (8th ed.). Hoboken, NJ. p. 166. ISBN 978-0-470-41997-7. OCLC 401168960.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: location missing publisher (link)
  18. ^ Matic, P (1988). "The Relation of Tensile Specimen Size and Geometry Effects to Unique Constitutive Parameters for Ductile Materials". Proceedings of the Royal Society of London. A. Mathematical and Physical Sciences. 417 (1853): 309–333. Bibcode:1988RSPSA.417..309M. doi:10.1098/rspa.1988.0063. S2CID 43033448.
  19. ^ Havner, K (2004). "On the Onset of Necking in the Tensile Test". International Journal of Plasticity. 20 (4–5): 965–978. doi:10.1016/j.ijplas.2003.05.004.
  20. ^ Kim, H (2005). "Finite Element Analysis of the Onset of Necking and the Post-Necking Behaviour During Uniaxial Tensile Testing". Materials Transactions. 46 (10): 2159–2163. doi:10.2320/matertrans.46.2159.
  21. ^ Joun, M (2007). "Finite Element Analysis of Tensile Testing with Emphasis on Necking". Computational Materials Science. 41 (1): 63–69. doi:10.1016/j.commatsci.2007.03.002.
  22. ^ Osovski, S (2013). "Dynamic Tensile Necking: Influence of Specimen Geometry and Boundary Conditions". Mechanics of Materials. 62: 1–13. doi:10.1016/j.mechmat.2013.03.002. hdl:10016/17020.
  23. ^ Choung, J (2008). "Study on True Stress Correction from Tensile Tests". Journal of Mechanical Science and Technology. 22 (6): 1039–1051. doi:10.1007/s12206-008-0302-3. S2CID 108776720.
  24. ^ Ho, H (2019). "Modelling Tensile Tests on High Strength S690 Steel Materials Undergoing Large Deformations". Engineering Structures. 192: 305–322. Bibcode:2019EngSt.192..305H. doi:10.1016/j.engstruct.2019.04.057. hdl:10397/101163. S2CID 182744244.
  25. ^ Samuel, E (2008). "Inter-Relation between True Stress at the Onset of Necking and True Uniform Strain in Steels - a Manifestation of Onset to Plastic Instability". Materials Science and Engineering A-Structural Materials Properties Microstructure and Processing. 480 (1–2): 506–509. doi:10.1016/j.msea.2007.07.074.
  26. ^ "FRACTURE OF MATERIALS" (PDF). U.S. Naval Academy. Archived (PDF) from the original on 2022-10-09. Retrieved 2 July 2022.
  27. ^ Qiu, Hai; Hanamura, Toshihiro; Torizuka, Shiro (2014). "Influence of Grain Size on the Ductile Fracture Toughness of Ferritic Steel". ISIJ International. 54 (8): 1958–1964. doi:10.2355/isijinternational.54.1958.
  28. ^ "Ductile-Brittle Transition Temperature and Impact Energy Tests - Yena Engineering". 18 November 2020.

External links edit

  • Ductility definition at engineersedge.com

ductility, ductility, earth, science, earth, science, malleability, redirects, here, property, cryptography, malleability, cryptography, this, article, needs, additional, citations, verification, please, help, improve, this, article, adding, citations, reliabl. For ductility in Earth science see Ductility Earth science Malleability redirects here For the property in cryptography see Malleability cryptography This article needs additional citations for verification Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed Find sources Ductility news newspapers books scholar JSTOR October 2008 Learn how and when to remove this template message Ductility is a mechanical property commonly described as a material s amenability to drawing e g into wire 1 In materials science ductility is defined by the degree to which a material can sustain plastic deformation under tensile stress before failure 2 3 Ductility is an important consideration in engineering and manufacturing It defines a material s suitability for certain manufacturing operations such as cold working and its capacity to absorb mechanical overload 4 Some metals that are generally described as ductile include gold and copper while platinum is the most ductile of all metals in pure form 5 However not all metals experience ductile failure as some can be characterized with brittle failure like cast iron Polymers generally can be viewed as ductile materials as they typically allow for plastic deformation 6 Tensile test of an Al Mg Si alloy The local necking and the cup and cone fracture surfaces are typical for ductile metals This tensile test of a nodular cast iron demonstrates low ductility Malleability a similar mechanical property is characterized by a material s ability to deform plastically without failure under compressive stress 7 8 Historically materials were considered malleable if they were amenable to forming by hammering or rolling 1 Lead is an example of a material which is relatively malleable but not ductile 5 9 Contents 1 Materials science 2 Quantification 2 1 Basic definitions 2 2 Effect of sample dimensions 3 Ductile brittle transition temperature 4 See also 5 References 6 External linksMaterials science edit nbsp Gold is extremely ductile It can be drawn into a monatomic wire and then stretched more before it breaks 10 Ductility is especially important in metalworking as materials that crack break or shatter under stress cannot be manipulated using metal forming processes such as hammering rolling drawing or extruding Malleable materials can be formed cold using stamping or pressing whereas brittle materials may be cast or thermoformed High degrees of ductility occur due to metallic bonds which are found predominantly in metals this leads to the common perception that metals are ductile in general In metallic bonds valence shell electrons are delocalized and shared between many atoms The delocalized electrons allow metal atoms to slide past one another without being subjected to strong repulsive forces that would cause other materials to shatter The ductility of steel varies depending on the alloying constituents Increasing the levels of carbon decreases ductility Many plastics and amorphous solids such as Play Doh are also malleable The most ductile metal is platinum and the most malleable metal is gold 11 12 When highly stretched such metals distort via formation reorientation and migration of dislocations and crystal twins without noticeable hardening 13 Quantification editBasic definitions edit The quantities commonly used to define ductility in a tension test are relative elongation in percent sometimes denoted as e f displaystyle varepsilon f nbsp and reduction of area sometimes denoted as q displaystyle q nbsp at fracture 14 Fracture strain is the engineering strain at which a test specimen fractures during a uniaxial tensile test Percent elongation or engineering strain at fracture can be written as 15 16 17 E L final gauge length initial gauge length initial gauge length l f l 0 l 0 100 displaystyle EL frac text final gauge length initial gauge length text initial gauge length frac l f l 0 l 0 cdot 100 nbsp Percent reduction in area can be written as 15 16 17 R A change in area original area A 0 A f A 0 100 displaystyle RA frac text change in area text original area frac A 0 A f A 0 cdot 100 nbsp where the area of concern is the cross sectional area of the gauge of the specimen According to Shigley s Mechanical Engineering Design 4 significant denotes about 5 0 percent elongation Effect of sample dimensions edit An important point concerning the value of the ductility nominal strain at failure in a tensile test is that it commonly exhibits a dependence on sample dimensions However a universal parameter should exhibit no such dependence and indeed there is no dependence for properties such as stiffness yield stress and ultimate tensile strength This occurs because the measured strain displacement at fracture commonly incorporates contributions from both the uniform deformation occurring up to the onset of necking and the subsequent deformation of the neck during which there is little or no deformation in the rest of the sample The significance of the contribution from neck development depends on the aspect ratio length diameter of the gauge length being greater when the ratio is low This is a simple geometric effect which has been clearly identified There have been both experimental studies 18 and theoretical explorations 19 20 21 22 of the effect mostly based on Finite Element Method FEM modelling Nevertheless it is not universally appreciated and since the range of sample dimensions in common use is quite wide it can lead to highly significant variations by factors of up to 2 or 3 in ductility values obtained for the same material in different tests A more meaningful representation of ductility would be obtained by identifying the strain at the onset of necking which should be independent of sample dimensions This point can be difficult to identify on a nominal stress strain curve because the peak representing the onset of necking is often relatively flat Moreover some brittle materials fracture before the onset of necking such that there is no peak In practice for many purposes it is preferable to carry out a different kind of test designed to evaluate the toughness energy absorbed during fracture rather than use ductility values obtained in tensile tests In an absolute sense ductility values are therefore virtually meaningless The actual true strain in the neck at the point of fracture bears no direct relation to the raw number obtained from the nominal stress strain curve the true strain in the neck is often considerably higher Also the true stress at the point of fracture is usually higher than the apparent value according to the plot The load often drops while the neck develops but the sectional area in the neck is also dropping more sharply so the true stress there is rising There is no simple way of estimating this value since it depends on the geometry of the neck While the true strain at fracture is a genuine indicator of ductility it cannot readily be obtained from a conventional tensile test The Reduction in Area RA is defined as the decrease in sectional area at the neck usually obtained by measurement of the diameter at one or both of the fractured ends divided by the original sectional area It is sometimes stated that this is a more reliable indicator of the ductility than the elongation at failure partly in recognition of the fact that the latter is dependent on the aspect ratio of the gauge length although this dependence is far from being universally appreciated There is something in this argument but the RA is still some way from being a genuinely meaningful parameter One objection is that it is not easy to measure accurately particularly with samples that are not circular in section Rather more fundamentally it is affected by both the uniform plastic deformation that took place before necking and by the development of the neck Furthermore it is sensitive to exactly what happens in the latter stages of necking when the true strain is often becoming very high and the behavior is of limited significance in terms of a meaningful definition of strength or toughness There has again been extensive study of this issue 23 24 25 Ductile brittle transition temperature edit nbsp Schematic appearance of round metal bars after tensile testing a Brittle fracture b Ductile fracture c Completely ductile fractureMetals can undergo two different types of fractures brittle fracture or ductile fracture Failure propagation occurs faster in brittle materials due to the ability for ductile materials to undergo plastic deformation Thus ductile materials are able to sustain more stress due to their ability to absorb more energy prior to failure than brittle materials are The plastic deformation results in the material following a modification of the Griffith equation where the critical fracture stress increases due to the plastic work required to extend the crack adding to the work necessary to form the crack work corresponding to the increase in surface energy that results from the formation of an addition crack surface 26 The plastic deformation of ductile metals is important as it can be a sign of the potential failure of the metal Yet the point at which the material exhibits a ductile behavior versus a brittle behavior is not only dependent on the material itself but also on the temperature at which the stress is being applied to the material The temperature where the material changes from brittle to ductile or vice versa is crucial for the design of load bearing metallic products The minimum temperature at which the metal transitions from a brittle behavior to a ductile behavior or from a ductile behavior to a brittle behavior is known as the ductile brittle transition temperature DBTT Below the DBTT the material will not be able to plastically deform and the crack propagation rate increases rapidly leading to the material undergoing brittle failure rapidly Furthermore DBTT is important since once a material is cooled below the DBTT it has a much greater tendency to shatter on impact instead of bending or deforming low temperature embrittlement Thus the DBTT indicates the temperature at which as temperature decreases a material s ability to deform in a ductile manner decreases and so the rate of crack propagation drastically increases In other words solids are very brittle at very low temperatures and their toughness becomes much higher at elevated temperatures For more general applications it is preferred to have a lower DBTT to ensure the material has a wider ductility range This ensures that sudden cracks are inhibited so that failures in the metal body are prevented It has been determined that the more slip systems a material has the wider the range of temperatures ductile behavior is exhibited at This is due to the slip systems allowing for more motion of dislocations when a stress is applied to the material Thus in materials with a lower amount of slip systems dislocations are often pinned by obstacles leading to strain hardening which increases the materials strength which makes the material more brittle For this reason FCC face centered cubic structures are ductile over a wide range of temperatures BCC body centered cubic structures are ductile only at high temperatures and HCP hexagonal closest packed structures are often brittle over wide ranges of temperatures This leads to each of these structures having different performances as they approach failure fatigue overload and stress cracking under various temperatures and shows the importance of the DBTT in selecting the correct material for a specific application For example zamak 3 exhibits good ductility at room temperature but shatters when impacted at sub zero temperatures DBTT is a very important consideration in selecting materials that are subjected to mechanical stresses A similar phenomenon the glass transition temperature occurs with glasses and polymers although the mechanism is different in these amorphous materials The DBTT is also dependent on the size of the grains within the metal as typically smaller grain size leads to an increase in tensile strength resulting in an increase in ductility and decrease in the DBTT This increase in tensile strength is due to the smaller grain sizes resulting in grain boundary hardening occurring within the material where the dislocations require a larger stress to cross the grain boundaries and continue to propagate throughout the material It has been shown that by continuing to refine ferrite grains to reduce their size from 40 microns down to 1 3 microns that it is possible to eliminate the DBTT entirely so that a brittle fracture never occurs in ferritic steel as the DBTT required would be below absolute zero 27 In some materials the transition is sharper than others and typically requires a temperature sensitive deformation mechanism For example in materials with a body centered cubic bcc lattice the DBTT is readily apparent as the motion of screw dislocations is very temperature sensitive because the rearrangement of the dislocation core prior to slip requires thermal activation This can be problematic for steels with a high ferrite content This famously resulted in serious hull cracking in Liberty ships in colder waters during World War II causing many sinkings DBTT can also be influenced by external factors such as neutron radiation which leads to an increase in internal lattice defects and a corresponding decrease in ductility and increase in DBTT The most accurate method of measuring the DBTT of a material is by fracture testing Typically four point bend testing at a range of temperatures is performed on pre cracked bars of polished material Two fracture tests are typically utilized to determine the DBTT of specific metals the Charpy V Notch test and the Izod test The Charpy V notch test determines the impact energy absorption ability or toughness of the specimen by measuring the potential energy difference resulting from the collision between a mass on a free falling pendulum and the machined V shaped notch in the sample resulting in the pendulum breaking through the sample The DBTT is determined by repeating this test over a variety of temperatures and noting when the resulting fracture changes to a brittle behavior which occurs when the absorbed energy is dramatically decreased The Izod test is essentially the same as the Charpy test with the only differentiating factor being the placement of the sample In the former the sample is placed vertically while in the latter the sample is placed horizontally with respect to the bottom of the base 28 For experiments conducted at higher temperatures dislocation activity clarification needed increases At a certain temperature dislocations shield clarification needed the crack tip to such an extent that the applied deformation rate is not sufficient for the stress intensity at the crack tip to reach the critical value for fracture KiC The temperature at which this occurs is the ductile brittle transition temperature If experiments are performed at a higher strain rate more dislocation shielding is required to prevent brittle fracture and the transition temperature is raised citation needed See also editDeformation Work hardening which improves ductility in uniaxial tension by delaying the onset of instability Strength of materialsReferences edit a b Brande William Thomas 1853 A Dictionary of Science Literature and Art Comprising the History Description and Scientific Principles of Every Branch of Human Knowledge with the Derivation and Definition of All the Terms in General Use Harper amp Brothers p 369 Kalpakjian Serope 1928 1984 Manufacturing processes for engineering materials Reading Mass Addison Wesley p 30 ISBN 0 201 11690 1 OCLC 9783323 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint multiple names authors list link CS1 maint numeric names authors list link Ductility What is Ductile Material Nuclear Power Retrieved 2020 11 14 a b Budynas Richard G 2015 Shigley s Mechanical Engineering Design 10th ed McGraw Hill p 233 ISBN 978 0 07 339820 4 a b Chandler Roberts Austen William 1894 An Introduction to the Study of Metallurgy London C Griffin p 16 Ductility and its effect on material failure The Engineering Archive n d https theengineeringarchive com material science page ductility material failure html Malleability Malleable Materials Nuclear Power Archived from the original on 2020 09 25 Retrieved 2020 11 14 DOE FUNDAMENTALS HANDBOOK MATERIAL SCIENCE Vol 1 Module 2 Properties of Metals U S Department of Energy January 1993 p 25 Rich Jack C 1988 The Materials and Methods of Sculpture Courier Dover Publications p 129 ISBN 978 0 486 25742 6 Masuda Hideki 2016 Combined Transmission Electron Microscopy In situ Observation of the Formation Process and Measurement of Physical Properties for Single Atomic Sized Metallic Wires In Janecek Milos Kral Robert eds Modern Electron Microscopy in Physical and Life Sciences InTech doi 10 5772 62288 ISBN 978 953 51 2252 4 S2CID 58893669 Vaccaro John 2002 Materials handbook Mc Graw Hill handbooks 15th ed Schwartz M 2002 CRC encyclopedia of materials parts and finishes 2nd ed Lah Che Akmal Nurul Trigueros Sonia 2019 Synthesis and modelling of the mechanical properties of Ag Au and Cu nanowires Sci Technol Adv Mater 20 1 225 261 Bibcode 2019STAdM 20 225L doi 10 1080 14686996 2019 1585145 PMC 6442207 PMID 30956731 Dieter G 1986 Mechanical Metallurgy McGraw Hill ISBN 978 0 07 016893 0 a b Ductility Review Strength Mechanics of Materials Engineers Edge www engineersedge com Retrieved 2020 07 14 a b Askeland Donald R 2016 6 4 Properties Obtained from the Tensile Test The science and engineering of materials Wright Wendelin J Seventh ed Boston MA p 195 ISBN 978 1 305 07676 1 OCLC 903959750 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint location missing publisher link a b Callister William D Jr 2010 6 6 Tensile Properties Materials science and engineering an introduction Rethwisch David G 8th ed Hoboken NJ p 166 ISBN 978 0 470 41997 7 OCLC 401168960 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint location missing publisher link Matic P 1988 The Relation of Tensile Specimen Size and Geometry Effects to Unique Constitutive Parameters for Ductile Materials Proceedings of the Royal Society of London A Mathematical and Physical Sciences 417 1853 309 333 Bibcode 1988RSPSA 417 309M doi 10 1098 rspa 1988 0063 S2CID 43033448 Havner K 2004 On the Onset of Necking in the Tensile Test International Journal of Plasticity 20 4 5 965 978 doi 10 1016 j ijplas 2003 05 004 Kim H 2005 Finite Element Analysis of the Onset of Necking and the Post Necking Behaviour During Uniaxial Tensile Testing Materials Transactions 46 10 2159 2163 doi 10 2320 matertrans 46 2159 Joun M 2007 Finite Element Analysis of Tensile Testing with Emphasis on Necking Computational Materials Science 41 1 63 69 doi 10 1016 j commatsci 2007 03 002 Osovski S 2013 Dynamic Tensile Necking Influence of Specimen Geometry and Boundary Conditions Mechanics of Materials 62 1 13 doi 10 1016 j mechmat 2013 03 002 hdl 10016 17020 Choung J 2008 Study on True Stress Correction from Tensile Tests Journal of Mechanical Science and Technology 22 6 1039 1051 doi 10 1007 s12206 008 0302 3 S2CID 108776720 Ho H 2019 Modelling Tensile Tests on High Strength S690 Steel Materials Undergoing Large Deformations Engineering Structures 192 305 322 Bibcode 2019EngSt 192 305H doi 10 1016 j engstruct 2019 04 057 hdl 10397 101163 S2CID 182744244 Samuel E 2008 Inter Relation between True Stress at the Onset of Necking and True Uniform Strain in Steels a Manifestation of Onset to Plastic Instability Materials Science and Engineering A Structural Materials Properties Microstructure and Processing 480 1 2 506 509 doi 10 1016 j msea 2007 07 074 FRACTURE OF MATERIALS PDF U S Naval Academy Archived PDF from the original on 2022 10 09 Retrieved 2 July 2022 Qiu Hai Hanamura Toshihiro Torizuka Shiro 2014 Influence of Grain Size on the Ductile Fracture Toughness of Ferritic Steel ISIJ International 54 8 1958 1964 doi 10 2355 isijinternational 54 1958 Ductile Brittle Transition Temperature and Impact Energy Tests Yena Engineering 18 November 2020 External links edit nbsp Look up ductility in Wiktionary the free dictionary nbsp Look up malleability in Wiktionary the free dictionary Ductility definition at engineersedge com DoITPoMS Teaching and Learning Package The Ductile Brittle Transition Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Ductility amp oldid 1205290218, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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