Abstract
Experiments on smooth and notched round specimens on a C–Mn steel used in nuclear industry are performed at different temperatures under quasi-static loadings, revealing dynamic strain aging (DSA). The behavior is highly dependent on temperature and strain rate, and a drop in fracture strain is observed. Fracture surface observation on notched tensile specimens shows classical ductile fracture mechanisms with growth and coalescence of voids. The apparent strain hardening behavior at each temperature and strain rate is taken into account to compute the void growth with the Rice and Tracey model and with a damage law developed from unit cell computations. It is shown that the apparent strain hardening at large strains is of major importance to correctly predict fracture with the Rice and Tracey model, but its influence on the void growth law is of minor importance. In particular, the stress triaxiality ratio within the notch is increased due to the negative strain rate sensitivity. The ductility drop observed in DSA domain is then partly explained, but void nucleation and void growth in presence of strain bands should be included in the fracture modeling of such materials.
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