Citation:
International Journal of Plasticity, January 2013, vol. 40, pp. 185-201
ISSN:
0749-6419
DOI:
10.1016/j.ijplas.2012.08.003
Sponsor:
The researchers of the University Carlos III of Madrid are indebted to the Comunidad Autónoma de Madrid (Project
CCG10-UC3M/DPI-5596)) and to the Ministerio de Ciencia e Innovación de España (Project DPI/2011-24068) for the financial
support received which allowed conducting part of this work. D. Rittel acknowledges the support of Carlos III University with
a Cátedra de Excelencia funded by Banco Santander during academic year 2011–2012.
We present a thermodynamic scheme to capture the variability of the Taylor-Quinney coefficient in austenitic steels showing strain induced martensitic transformation at high strain rates. For that task, the constitutive description due to Zaera et al. (2012) hWe present a thermodynamic scheme to capture the variability of the Taylor-Quinney coefficient in austenitic steels showing strain induced martensitic transformation at high strain rates. For that task, the constitutive description due to Zaera et al. (2012) has been extended to account for the heat sources involved in the temperature increase of the material. These are the latent heat released due to the exothermic character of the transformation and the heat dissipated due to austenite and martensite straining. Through a differential treatment of these dissipative terms, the Taylor-Quinney coefficient develops a direct connection with the martensitic transformation becoming stress, strain and strain rate dependent. The improved constitutive description sheds light on experimental results available in the literature reporting unusual (> 1) values for the Taylor-Quinney coefficient.[+][-]