2019
DOI: 10.1088/1361-651x/ab359f
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Combined crystal plasticity and grain boundary modeling of creep in ferritic-martensitic steels: II. The effect of stress and temperature on engineering and microstructural properties

Abstract: This paper describes a series of physically-based crystal plasticity finite element method (CPFEM) simulations of long-term creep and creep rupture of Grade 91 steel. It is Part 2 of a two part series of papers. Part 1 describes the simulation framework; this part focuses on specific simulations and on how the predicted long-term creep properties of Grade 91 compare to the assumptions used in current high temperature design practices. This work extends the model developed in Part 1 to look at creep properties … Show more

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Cited by 8 publications
(13 citation statements)
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“…For instance recent experiments performed at the Advanced Photon Source show Identify the influence of microstructure on mesoscale creep and fatigue damage September 2020 that not all the favorably oriented grain boundaries will experience cavitation. This is in contrast with the baseline results of the utilized physically-based micro-mechanical model [4]. The most probable cause of this behavior is the homogeneity of grain boundary properties in the model.…”
Section: Identifying Parameters Distributionscontrasting
confidence: 68%
See 2 more Smart Citations
“…For instance recent experiments performed at the Advanced Photon Source show Identify the influence of microstructure on mesoscale creep and fatigue damage September 2020 that not all the favorably oriented grain boundaries will experience cavitation. This is in contrast with the baseline results of the utilized physically-based micro-mechanical model [4]. The most probable cause of this behavior is the homogeneity of grain boundary properties in the model.…”
Section: Identifying Parameters Distributionscontrasting
confidence: 68%
“…Following the example of Nassif et al [3] our model uses isotropic elasticity to describe the elastic behavior of the grain bulk, a crystal plasticity based model to incorporate deformation caused by dislocation glide, and an isotropic plasticity-based model to incorporate diffusion creep. References [3,4] describe this model in detail. This chapter summarizes key features.…”
Section: The Prior Austenite Grain Modelmentioning
confidence: 99%
See 1 more Smart Citation
“…Grade 91 steel (c.f. [16], [17]) demonstrates this effective stress measure best fits the multiaxial failure of Grade 91 under creep conditions, including very long rupture time and triaxial stress simulations that cannot be implemented with experimental tests. This work will appear in an upcoming publication.…”
Section: Recent Work At Argonne National Laboratory On Crystal Plastimentioning
confidence: 92%
“…A purely empirical model, for example the classical Larson-Miller correlation [1] might miss a mechanism shift that occurs at relatively the low stresses found in operating components but rarely tested because of the correspondingly long rupture times. By contrast, a microstructural model can capture this mechanism transition and lead to better predictions for long-term properties [2]. A similar concept applies to other material properties where direct test data is sparse.…”
Section: Overview: Why Use Microstructural Models?mentioning
confidence: 99%