Abstract

The temperature rise in a sheet tensile specimen has been calculated by the finite difference method for a plain-carbon steel at various strain rates and in several environments. Prior to necking, a uniform heat generation function is used with the governing flow equation while during the post-uniform strain, an empirical heat generation function is used. The empirical function is based on a strain distribution equation generated by curve fitting of experimental data. The effect of heat transfer conditions on the temperature increase has been discussed. The maximum temperature rise in air may reach 42 K at the center of an I.F. steel specimen at a strain rate of 10-2/s. The instability strain during tensile testing has been predicted by taking into account strain hardening, strain-rate hardening, and deformationinduced heating. The results show that significant deformation heating can occur during tensile testing in air at “normal” strain rates near 10-2/s, and that the uniform elongation can be affected markedly. Predictions for other alloys based on tabulated data are also presented.

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