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Journal article

Three-dimensional investigation of grain orientation effects on void growth in commercially pure titanium

Abstract

The fracture process of commercially pure titanium was visualized in model materials containing artificial holes. These model materials were fabricated using a femtosecond laser coupled with a diffusion bonding technique to obtain voids in the interior of titanium samples. Changes in void dimensions during in-situ straining were recorded in three dimensions using x-ray computed tomography. Void growth obtained experimentally was compared with the Rice and Tracey model which predicted well the average void growth. A large scatter in void growth data was explained by differences in grain orientation which was confirmed by crystal plasticity simulations. It was also shown that grain orientation has a stronger effect on void growth than intervoid spacing and material strength. Intervoid spacing, however, appears to control whether the intervoid ligament failure is ductile or brittle.

Authors

Pushkareva M; Adrien J; Maire E; Segurado J; Llorca J; Weck A

Journal

Materials Science and Engineering A, Vol. 671, , pp. 221–232

Publisher

Elsevier

Publication Date

August 1, 2016

DOI

10.1016/j.msea.2016.06.053

ISSN

0921-5093

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