Unusual plastic deformation and damage features in Titanium: experimental tests and constitutive modeling
Benoit Revil-Baudard, Oana Cazacu, Philip Flater, Nitin Chandola, J.L., Alves

TL;DR
This study investigates the plastic deformation and damage mechanisms in polycrystalline pure titanium through experiments and models, revealing anisotropic behavior and unique damage evolution patterns compared to FCC metals.
Contribution
It introduces a physically meaningful anisotropic damage model that accurately predicts deformation and damage evolution in titanium using minimal mechanical tests.
Findings
Damage initiates at the center in smooth specimens
Damage starts at the surface in notched specimens
Model accurately predicts anisotropic damage behavior
Abstract
In this paper, we present an experimental study on plastic deformation and damage of polycrystalline pure Ti, as well as modeling of the observed behavior. From the mechanical characterization data, it can be concluded that the material displays anisotropy and tension-compression asymmetry. As concerns damage, the X-ray tomography measurements conducted reveal that damage distribution and evolution in this HCP Ti material is markedly different than in a typical FCC material such as copper. Stewart and Cazacu (2011) anisotropic elastic/plastic damage model is used to describe the behavior. All material parameters involved in this model have a clear physical significance, being related to plastic properties, and are determined based on very few simple mechanical tests. It is shown that this model predicts correctly the anisotropy in plastic deformation, and its strong influence on damage…
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