Primary-transient creep and anelastic backflow of pure copper deformed at low temperatures and ultra-low strain rates
(1. School of Mechanical Engineering, Tianjin University of Technology, Tianjin 300191, China;
2. Department of Electrical and Materials Science, Faculty of Engineering Sciences,
Kyushu University, Kasuga, Fukuoka 816-8580, Japan)
2. Department of Electrical and Materials Science, Faculty of Engineering Sciences,
Kyushu University, Kasuga, Fukuoka 816-8580, Japan)
Abstract: Creep and anelastic backflow behaviors of pure copper (4N Cu) with grain size dg=40 μm were investigated at low temperatures of T <0.3Tm (Tm is melting point) and ultra-low creep rates of ≤1×10-10 s-1 by a high strain-resolution measurement (the helicoid spring specimen technique). Analysis of creep data was based on the scaling factors of creep curves instead of the conventional extrapolated steady-state creep rate. Power-law creep equation is suggested to be the best for describing the primary transient creep behavior, because the pre-parameter does not apparently change with elapsed time. The observed anelastic strains are 1/6 of the calculated elastic strains, and linear viscous behavior was identified from the logarithm plot of the anelastic strain rate versus anelastic strain (slope equals 1). Therefore, the creep anelasticity is suggested to be due to the unbowing of there-dimensional network of dislocations.
Key words: pure copper; creep; dislocation; anelasticity; constitutive creep equation