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Journal ArticleDOI

The correlation of indentation experiments

TLDR
In this article, a simplified theoretical model of this behaviour is obtained by extending R. Hill's theory of expanding a cylindrical or spherical cavity in an elastic-plastic material to ensure compatibility between the volume of material displaced by the indenter and that accommodated by elastic expansion.
Abstract
The theory of rigid perfectly-plastic solids predicts indentation pressures, using wedge-shaped or conical indenters, which depend only on the geometry of the indenter and the yield stress of the material. With blunt wedges or with materials having a low ratio of Young's modulus, E, to yield stress, Y, the material displaced by the indenter is accommodated by an approximately radial expansion of the surrounding material. The indentation pressure then falls below the rigid perfectly-plastic value. In these circumstances, measurements of indentation pressure for a variety of indenter geometries are shown to correlate with the single parameter (E/Y) tan β, where β is the angle of inclination of the indenter to the surface at the edge of the indentation. This parameter may be interpreted as the ratio of the strain imposed by the indenter to the yield strain of the material. A simplified theoretical model of this behaviour is obtained by extending R. Hill's theory of expanding a cylindrical or spherical cavity in an elastic-plastic material to ensure compatibility between the volume of material displaced by the indenter and that accommodated by elastic expansion.

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Citations
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Journal ArticleDOI

Visualisation of deformation gradients in structural steel by macroscopic magnetic domain distribution imaging (Bitter technique)

TL;DR: In this paper, the Bitter technique was applied for the first time to visualise macroscopic deformation gradients in a polycrystalline low-carbon steel, where spherical indentation was chosen to produce a multiaxial elastic-plastic deformation state.
Journal ArticleDOI

Strain-Dependent Plasticity Evolution of Window Glass

TL;DR: In this article, a series of nanoindentations with various sharp indenters was systematically explored to investigate how the applied strain can affect the plasticity evolution of window glass, and it was revealed that, as the strain increases, the contribution of shear flow to total plasticity becomes larger, whereas that of densification gets smaller.
Journal ArticleDOI

"Incompressible" pore effect on the mechanical behavior of Low-K dielectric films

TL;DR: In this paper, the authors evaluated different low-K dielectric constant materials in terms of their mechanical properties using nanoindentation and found that the indenter contact is mostly elastic, as the loading and unloading portions of the load-displacement curve did not show any hysteresis.
References
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Book

Theory of elasticity

TL;DR: The theory of the slipline field is used in this article to solve the problem of stable and non-stressed problems in plane strains in a plane-strain scenario.
Book

The mathematical theory of plasticity

Rodney Hill
TL;DR: In this paper, the solution of two-dimensional non-steady motion problems in two dimensions is studied. But the solution is not a solution to the problem in three dimensions.
Journal Article

On the Contact of Elastic Solids

Hertz
- 01 Jan 1882 - 
Book

Hardness of metals

F. C. Lea
Journal ArticleDOI

The Elastic Contact of Rough Spheres

TL;DR: In this article, the Hertzian theory of elastic contact between spheres is extended by considering one of the spheres to be rough, so that contact occurs, as in practice, at a number of discrete microcontacts.