Abstract

In this paper, a new constitutive model for plastic behavior of the metastable austenitic stainless steels at cryogenic temperatures is presented. The constitutive model is a phenomenological hyperelastic-based large deformation model developed in the framework of continuum damage mechanics considering the dissipative phenomena of strain-induced phase transformation and damage growth during plastic deformation. To solve the coupled nonlinear set of equations, incremental equations and the related implicit integration method have been developed. Numerical analysis is performed by implementing the constitutive model in a UMAT subroutine in ABAQUS/STANDARD. In addition, experiments have been conducted to identify the material model parameters for AISI304 steel at the 77K temperature. In addition to calibration, the constitutive model was validated via a tensile test of a notched sample. Also, the model has been compared with the experimental data at 4.2 K available in the literature. The results show that the model is well able to predict the hardening behavior, martensite evolution, and damage growth during the plastic deformation until the fracture with acceptable accuracy.

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