Abstract

This paper discusses recent developments in creep, over a wide range of temperature, that may change our understanding of creep. The five-power law creep exponent (3.5–7) has never been explained in fundamental terms. The best the scientific community has done is to develop a natural three power-law creep equation that falls short of rationalizing the higher stress exponents that are typically five. This inability has persisted for many decades. Computational work examining the stress-dependence of the climb rate of edge dislocations may rationalize the phenomenological creep equations. Harper–Dorn creep, “discovered” over 60 years ago, has been immersed in controversy. Some investigators have insisted that a stress exponent of one is reasonable. Others believe that the observation of a stress exponent of one is a consequence of dislocation network frustration. Others believe the stress exponent is artificial due to the inclusion of restoration mechanisms, such as dynamic recrystallization or grain growth that is not of any consequence in the five power-law regime. Also, the experiments in the Harper–Dorn regime, which accumulate strain very slowly (sometimes over a year), may not have attained a true steady state. New theories suggest that the absence or presence of Harper–Dorn may be a consequence of the initial dislocation density. Novel experimental work suggests that power-law breakdown may be a consequence of a supersaturation of vacancies which increase self-diffusion.

Highlights

  • This paper will review recent work that appears to allow a better understanding of the basis of elevated temperature creep in single phase ceramics, minerals, metals, and class M alloys

  • Power-law, power-law-breakdown, and the so-called Harper–Dorn creep have been re-examined in terms of some of the latest developments within these creep regimes

  • It appears that within the Harper–Dorn regime, stress exponents that are higher than the expected value of one can be observed

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Summary

Introduction

This paper will review recent work that appears to allow a better understanding of the basis of elevated temperature creep in single phase ceramics, minerals, metals, and class M (pure metal behavior) alloys. This data was compiled by Blum [1] and represents trends in steady-state creep behavior that are widely accepted. This plot describes steady-state creep where hardening processes are believed to be exclusively balanced by dynamic recovery.

General Creep Plasticity Considerations and Five Power-Law Creep
D Gb σ 1
It can be noted that the plot a stress exponent of aboutThe
Power law Breakdown
Conclusions
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