B. Bacroix et al., Simulation of the orientation dependence of stored energy during rolling deformation of low carbon steels, MODEL SIM M, 7(5), 1999, pp. 851-864
In order to furnish some input data to Monte Carlo codes developed for the
simulation of static recrystallization in low carbon steels, two polycrysta
lline models are used in conjunction with four different hardening laws to
estimate numerically the stored energy within individual grains, which is d
ue to the increase in dislocation density during rolling. Three quantities
are calculated as a function of final orientation, which are believed to be
good estimates of this energy: these are the average dislocation density (
linked to the square of an average reference shear stress), the total plast
ic work and the final plastic work rate. It is thus found that the three se
lected parameters present the same variation trends for a given model, what
ever the hardening law. However, the Taylor and VPSC models lead to opposit
e conclusions: at the end of the simulated rolling process, the gamma (resp
ectively alpha) orientations are the hardest (respectively softest) with th
e Taylor model and the softest (respectively hardest) with the VPSC one; th
us, the present data cannot be used in the present state to perform recryst
allization simulations but may be used to validate the different polycrysta
lline models, since they are more sensitive to the interaction law than the
texture evolution or macroscopic response.