Abstract

In this work, an austenitic 316 L steel was processed by surface mechanical attrition treatment (SMAT), and the induced gradient microstructure was highlighted by experimental measurements. A combined dislocation density-based and grain size-dependent constitutive model is developed to describe the mechanical behaviour of the gradient-microstructured material. In addition, this model also incorporates the grain size-dependent initial twin distribution and evolution of deformation twinning. Residual stress, initial dislocation density and twins are considered to reconstruct the depth-dependent residual fields induced by SMAT. Furthermore, the evolution of dislocation density and twin volume fraction is described during uniaxial tensile loading. Particular attention is devoted to investigate the effect of residual stress and deformation twinning on mechanical behaviour. Results of finite element simulation showed that the gradient microstructure enhances the yield strength, which is in agreement with previous experimental observations. It was revealed that residual stress significantly weakens the yield strength at the initial deformation stage, whereas it has little influence on the plastic behaviour at large deformation. The assumed grain size-dependent deformation twinning model allows describing the evolution of deformation twinning on gradient microstructure. The deformation twinning increases in relation to increased strain hardening during tensile loading. However, the evolution of twin volume fraction shows almost no twin and no variation of twinning within the nanocrystalline grain region.

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