Abstract

Aspects of the cyclically saturated responses of initially annealed, conventional grain size (average grain diameter of approximately 50 μm) and electrodeposited, ultrafine grain (grains from 20 to 500 nm) nickel to reversed proportional and 90° out-of-phase axial-torsional, strain-controlled cycling at a nominally constant equivalent inelastic strain amplitude of approximately 100 μ strain are reported. An anisotropic, axial-torsional subspace version of Abdel-Karim and Ohno’s kinematic hardening model is presented. Within the framework of conventional small strain, rate-independent plasticity, this approach is used to model the responses. An anhysteretic, phenomenolically based, magnetomechanical model is coupled to the rate-independent plasticity model to include the cyclic magnetostriction response. The kinematic hardening parameter determination scheme, using the proportional path responses, is described. The model correlations achieved are presented and the ability of the resulting models to capture the 90° out-of-phase responses is examined. The model parameter sets, as determined from the proportional responses, require small changes to result in more accurate correlation of the 90° out-of-phase responses and the implications of this are discussed. The relative values of the model parameters between the two materials reflect the initial microstructures. Persistent mean stresses associated with mean total strains imposed are successfully modeled for the proportional strain path responses but not for the 90° out-of-phase responses.

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