TY - JOUR
T1 - Regression-based CVN-KIC Models for hot work tool steels
AU - Qamar, S. Z.
AU - Sheikh, A. K.
AU - Arif, A. F.M.
AU - Pervez, T.
N1 - Funding Information:
The authors acknowledge the support of King Fahd University of Petroleum and Minerals (Project # FT-2001/19), and Sultan Qaboos University for this work.
PY - 2006/8/25
Y1 - 2006/8/25
N2 - Dies and tools used in hot metal forming (extrusion, forging, rolling, etc.) are exposed to high pressures, elevated temperatures, and thermo-mechanical fatigue. The most common mode of in-service die failure is fatigue fracture (brittle failure through crack propagation). Reliable determination of fracture toughness of the die material is thus critically important. However, as die steels have a combination of high-hardness and high-strength, and are used at elevated temperatures, standard plane-strain fracture toughness (KIC) testing methods become impracticable. Alternate testing procedures such as the Charpy impact energy (CVN), together with empirical/semi-empirical correlations of KIC to other data, are then more viable and economical. Experimental data (values of KIC, CVN, and HRC) of H13 steels have been collected through an exhaustive literature search. This data set has been augmented through in-house experimentation: samples variously heat treated (different tempering temperatures and times, and both air-cooling and oil-quenching), and tested at different working temperatures. Linear and quadratic models are proposed for determination of fracture toughness, based on experimental (in-house) and published values of Charpy impact energy (CVN) and Rockwell hardness (HRC), both at room and at elevated temperatures.
AB - Dies and tools used in hot metal forming (extrusion, forging, rolling, etc.) are exposed to high pressures, elevated temperatures, and thermo-mechanical fatigue. The most common mode of in-service die failure is fatigue fracture (brittle failure through crack propagation). Reliable determination of fracture toughness of the die material is thus critically important. However, as die steels have a combination of high-hardness and high-strength, and are used at elevated temperatures, standard plane-strain fracture toughness (KIC) testing methods become impracticable. Alternate testing procedures such as the Charpy impact energy (CVN), together with empirical/semi-empirical correlations of KIC to other data, are then more viable and economical. Experimental data (values of KIC, CVN, and HRC) of H13 steels have been collected through an exhaustive literature search. This data set has been augmented through in-house experimentation: samples variously heat treated (different tempering temperatures and times, and both air-cooling and oil-quenching), and tested at different working temperatures. Linear and quadratic models are proposed for determination of fracture toughness, based on experimental (in-house) and published values of Charpy impact energy (CVN) and Rockwell hardness (HRC), both at room and at elevated temperatures.
KW - CVN-K correlation
KW - Charpy impact energy
KW - Fracture toughness
KW - Metal forming
KW - Tool steels (H13)
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U2 - 10.1016/j.msea.2006.05.103
DO - 10.1016/j.msea.2006.05.103
M3 - Article
AN - SCOPUS:33746339243
SN - 0921-5093
VL - 430
SP - 208
EP - 215
JO - Materials Science and Engineering A
JF - Materials Science and Engineering A
IS - 1-2
ER -