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Published November 2011 | public
Journal Article

Experimental study of heterogeneities in strain and temperature fields at the microstructural level of polycrystalline metals through fully-coupled full-field measurements by Digital Image Correlation and Infrared Thermography

Abstract

In this paper, we investigate and quantify the thermal effects induced by plastic deformation at the level of the microstructure of a polycrystalline metallic sample. For the first time, this investigation is conducted on a specimen containing hundred of grains. We use a unique experimental setup to access—simultaneously in-situ and in real time—strain and temperature fields of an austenitic stainless steel under tensile loading. We show that strain fields are directly linked to the expression of plasticity at the grain scale. We show, on the other hand, that thermal fields at the last increment of deformation are linked to the microstructural expression of plasticity on a larger lengthscale corresponding, instead, to grain clusters. Hence strain fields exhibit stronger localization features than the temperature fields in terms of both values and space. For a mean temperature rise of 0.75 °C and a global deformation of 2.4% in the fastest quasi-static regime investigated in this paper, the maximum local temperature rise is measured to be 0.88 °C even though local strain in grains can reach up to 6.7%. These fully-coupled measurements also provide the first experimental evidence that an instantaneous coupling takes place within grains between strain gradients and thermal dissipation. Finally, an estimation of a grain-scale field of the fraction of plastic work converted into heat is conducted and shown to be not only heterogeneous but also to be related to the microstructural features of deformation at the surface of the material, namely to the absence or presence of slip bands. The results obtained support the relevance of establishing energy balances and acquiring stored energy data at the microstructural scale where damage localization takes place.

Additional Information

© 2011 Elsevier Ltd. Received 23 November 2010; revised 17 May 2011; Available online 22 August 2011. This study has been funded by the CNRS, the Nord-Pas-de-Calais area (CISIT) and the European Community (FEDER). The authors would like to acknowledge the CNRS Research Group GDR's 2519 "Full-field measurements and Identification in Solid Mechanics" as well as François Hild (LMT, Cachan) for his valuable advice about the software CorreliLMT. LB also thanks Daniel Rittel for their fruitful discussions

Additional details

Created:
August 22, 2023
Modified:
October 24, 2023