Skip to main content
U.S. Department of Energy
Office of Scientific and Technical Information

The ideal strength of iron in tension and shear

Journal Article · · Acta Materialia
OSTI ID:812864

The ideal strength of a material is the stress at which the lattice itself becomes unstable and, hence, sets a firm upper bound on the mechanical strength the material can have. The present paper includes an ab-initio calculation of the ideal shear strength of Fe. It is, to our knowledge, the first such computation for any ferromagnetic material. The paper also elaborates on our earlier calculation of the ideal tensile strength of Fe by studying the effects of strains which break the tetragonal symmetry. The strengths were calculated using the Projector Augmented Wave Method within the framework of density functional theory and the generalized gradient approximation. In <001> tension the ideal strength is determined by an elastic instability of the ferromagnetic phase along the ''Bain'' strain path from bcc to fcc. An <001> tensile strain also leads to instability with respect to transformation into a face centered orthorhombic structure, and to various magnetic instabilities. However, these are encountered at larger strains and, thus, do not affect the ideal strength. We also investigated the ideal shear strength of bcc iron in two prominent shear systems, <111>{l_brace}112{r_brace} and <111>{l_brace}110{r_brace}. In both shear systems the ideal strength is determined by the body centered tetragonal structure that defines a nearby saddle point on the energy surface. The ideal shear strengths are thus very similar, though they are not identical since the two shears follow slightly different strain paths from bcc to bct. We investigated the magnetic instabilities encountered during <111>{l_brace}112{r_brace} shear. These instabilities do not appear until the strain is significantly greater than the instability strain of the ferromagnetic crystal. Hence while Fe exhibits some novel effects due to magnetism, they do not affect the ideal strength, which is determined by the same elastic instabilities that determine the strengths of most other bcc metals.

Research Organization:
Ernest Orlando Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory, Berkeley, CA (US)
Sponsoring Organization:
U.S. DOE. Director, Office of Science. Basic Energy Sciences (US)
DOE Contract Number:
AC03-76SF00098
OSTI ID:
812864
Report Number(s):
LBNL--52353
Journal Information:
Acta Materialia, Journal Name: Acta Materialia Vol. 51; ISSN 1359-6454; ISSN ACMAFD
Country of Publication:
United States
Language:
English

Similar Records

Ideal strengths of bcc metals
Journal Article · Fri Dec 31 23:00:00 EST 1999 · Materials Science and Engineering A · OSTI ID:803750

Ideal strength of bcc molybdenum and niobium
Journal Article · Fri Nov 30 23:00:00 EST 2001 · Physical Review B · OSTI ID:805162

Strain-induced elastic moduli softening and associated fcc{r_reversible}bcc transition in iron
Journal Article · Sun Nov 07 23:00:00 EST 2004 · Applied Physics Letters · OSTI ID:20634397