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MohammadMahdi Ashrafian

MohammadMahdi Ashrafian

Academic rank: Assistant Professor
ORCID: https://orcid.org/0000-0001-7591-370X
Education: PhD.
ScopusId:
HIndex: 5/00
Faculty: Faculty of Engineering
Address:
Phone: 1025

Research

Title
A novel phenomenological constitutive model for Ti-6Al-4V at high temperature conditions and quasi-static strain rates
Type
JournalPaper
Keywords
phenomenological constitutive model, Ti-6Al-4V, quasi-static strain rates
Year
2021
Journal Proceedings of the Institution of Mechanical Engineers, Part G: Journal of Aerospace Engineering
DOI
Researchers MohammadMahdi Ashrafian

Abstract

Phenomenological constitutive modeling of Ti-6Al-4V at temperatures between 923 and 1023 K under 0.0005–0.05 s−1 quasi-static rates is studied based on a phenomenological approach. For this purpose, the Johnson–Cook constitutive model is revisited. At low temperature conditions under moderate to high strain rates, the material’s stress–strain curves are the most similar to power-law function. Contrary to this, at high temperature conditions under low to moderate strain rates, the saturation-type function well describes the stress–strain curves. On the other hand, it is illustrated that the Johnson–Cook constitutive model is feeble to predict the material’s behavior correctly. Accordingly, in this study, a viscoplastic temperature-dependent constitutive model is developed. The strain rate hardening as well as thermal softening of the developed model is the same as the Johnson–Cook model. But a temperature-dependent strain hardening function is proposed in which both the saturation-type and power-law hardening behaviors of the material are implemented. In comparison with the Johnson–Cook model, the new constitutive model’s fidelity in capturing the titanium behavior is depicted. At last, by considering an Arrhenius-type phenomenological constitutive model, it is noted that the developed constitutive model has the best correctness in predicting the Ti-6Al-4V stress–strain behavior at high temperature conditions under quasi-static rates.