Metallurgical and Materials Transactions A | 2019

Effect of Test Method on Stress-Relaxation Behavior of Alloy 718

 
 
 
 
 

Abstract


The stress-relaxation behavior of alloy 718 was established at 991\xa0K (718\xa0°C) using two contrasting test protocols. For this purpose, compression and tension samples extracted from two subscale forgings were first solution treated and cooled to room temperature. Each sample was then reheated to 991\xa0K (718\xa0°C), compressed or pulled isothermally to a total strain between 0.006 and 0.02, and then allowed to relax after locking either (i) the extensometer attached to the dies (compression tests) or reduced section (tension tests) or (ii) the ram itself. For the tests in compression, the stress dropped in a monotonic fashion under locked-extensometer conditions, while the locked-ram mode gave rise to a short stress drop, a broad hardening stage, and finally softening at long times. For the tension stress-relaxation tests, monotonic stress drops whose magnitudes varied for the two test modes were observed. The various behaviors were ascribed to the specific level of plastic strain imposed during the different types of tests, its quantitative effect on the level of dynamic strain aging, and thus the increment in hardening which counterbalanced stress-relaxation per se.

Volume 50
Pages 1397-1408
DOI 10.1007/s11661-018-5092-3
Language English
Journal Metallurgical and Materials Transactions A

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