Abstract
An account is given of the outline and progress of an examination of the general stress, time, and temperature dependence of the creep, plastic strain, and relaxation properties of several metals and metallic alloys, which, while being typical practical engineering materials, are different in their basic structures. The temperature range examined for each of these materials has been in each case chosen as the practical temperature range of use at elevated temperatures in actual engineering practice. The work involves simple tensile, torsion, and combined stress creep tests, and similar varieties of short period plastic strain tests and relaxation tests. The results, so far obtained in the work, and the inferences drawn from them, are discussed in relation to such appropriate theory as has currently been advanced, and in several cases it has been possible to suggest relations modifying or replacing those implicit in such theory.
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