Combined effects of anisotropy and tension-compression asymmetry on the torsional response of AZ31 Mg
Nitin Chandola, Ricardo A. Lebensohn, Benoit Revil-Baudard, Oana, Cazacu, Raja K. Mishra, Fr\'ed\'eric Barlat

TL;DR
This study demonstrates that accounting for anisotropy and tension-compression asymmetry at both crystal and polycrystal levels is essential to accurately predict the torsional response of AZ31 Mg, using advanced modeling frameworks.
Contribution
It introduces combined modeling approaches that incorporate anisotropy and asymmetry effects to accurately predict AZ31 Mg's torsional behavior, surpassing traditional models.
Findings
Both models accurately predict experimental torsional responses.
Considering twinning and slip at crystal level is crucial for predictions.
Hill's criterion underestimates axial strains compared to advanced models.
Abstract
In this paper it is demonstrated that only by accounting for the combined effects of anisotropy and tension-compression asymmetry both at single crystal and polycrystal levels, it is possible to explain and accurately predict the peculiarities of the room-temperature torsional response of a strongly textured AZ31 Mg material. This is shown by using two modeling frameworks, namely: the viscoplastic self-consistent (VPSC) polycrystal model that accounts for tension-compression asymmetry of the mechanical response of a polycrystalline aggregate due to the occurrence of twinning at single crystal level, and an anisotropic plasticity model based on an orthotropic yield criterion that accounts for tension-compression asymmetry in plastic flow at macroscopic level, developed by Cazacu et al. (2006). It is shown that unlike Hill's (1948), the latter macroscopic criterion quantitatively predicts…
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