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Herein, the flattening and subsequent tensile testing (in the hoop direction) of steel pipes used for transmission of oil and gas are concerned. A particular focus is on the use of a novel indentation plastometry test (PIP), applied to the outer free surface of an as-received pipe. This allows a stress–strain curve to be obtained from a relatively small volume (a disk of diameter about 1 mm and thickness around 100–200 μm). Whole section and reduced section tensile testing, of as-received and flattened samples are carried out. Four different pipes are studied. While there are some variations between them, there is a general trend for near-surface regions of the pipe to be a little harder than the interior, and for flattened pipes to be a little harder than unflattened ones, although these are not dramatic or well-defined effects. PIP testing also confirms that these pipes exhibit little or no anisotropy. It is in general concluded that PIP-derived stress–strain curves for testing of the outside of a pipe are likely to be quite close to those obtained by tensile testing of the whole section in the hoop direction, after flattening.  相似文献   
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An attraction of the profilometry-based indentation plastometry (PIP) procedure is that, while it involves interrogation of volumes sufficiently large to ensure that bulk properties are obtained, it still allows stress–strain curves to be inferred for relatively small regions, such that local properties can be mapped where they are changing over short distances. It is employed here to obtain these characteristics as a function of depth in samples that have been case hardened by the diffusional penetration of carbon, to a depth of just over a mm. This has been done for a grade of steel that is commonly treated in this way. The thickness of the layer characterized by the PIP test is around 200 μm. In addition, curvature measurements on strip samples, after incremental removal of thin layers, have been used to evaluate the (compressive) residual stresses in near-surface regions. These range up to around 200 MPa. Such stresses have only a small effect on the PIP measurements. The carburization raises the peak yield stress from the base level of around 1000 MPa to about 1400 MPa, followed by considerable work hardening. The reliability of these PIP-derived stress–strain relationships has been confirmed by comparing experimental outcomes of Vickers hardness tests with FEM predictions based on their use.  相似文献   
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This work concerns the use of profilometry-based indentation plastometry (PIP) to obtain mechanical property information for maraging steel samples produced via an additive manufacturing route (laser powder bed fusion). Bars are produced in both “horizontal” (all material close to the build plate) and “vertical” (progressively increasing distance from the build plate) configurations. Samples are mechanically tested in both as-built and age-hardened conditions. Stress–strain curves from uniaxial testing (tensile and compressive) are compared with those from PIP testing. Tensile test data suggest significant anisotropy, with the horizontal direction harder than the vertical direction. However, systematic compressive tests, allowing curves to be obtained for both build and transverse directions in various locations, indicate that there is no anisotropy anywhere in these materials. This is consistent with electron backscattered diffraction results, indicating that there is no significant texture in these materials. It is also consistent with the outcomes of PIP testing, which can detect anisotropy with high sensitivity. Furthermore, both PIP testing and compression testing results indicate that the changing growth conditions at different distances from the build plate can lead to strength variations. It seems likely that what has previously been interpreted as anisotropy in the tensile response is in fact due to inhomogeneity of this type.  相似文献   
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Herein, it is concerned with the use of profilometry-based indentation plastometry (PIP) to obtain mechanical property information for particulate metal matrix composites (MMCs). This type of test, together with conventional uniaxial testing, has been applied to four different MMCs (produced with various particulate contents and processing conditions). It is shown that reliable stress–strain curves can be obtained using PIP, although the possibility of premature (prenecking) fracture should be noted. Close attention is paid to scale effects. As a consequence of variations in local spatial distributions of particulate, the “representative volume” of these materials can be relatively large. This can lead to a certain amount of scatter in PIP profiles and it is advisable to carry out a number of repeat PIP tests in order to obtain macroscopic properties. Nevertheless, it is shown that PIP testing can reliably detect the relatively minor (macroscopic) anisotropy exhibited by forged materials of this type.  相似文献   
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