论文标题
粗糙金属表面的塑性变形
Plastic deformation of rough metallic surfaces
论文作者
论文摘要
我们为塑料变形的金属(铝)块的表面形貌提供了实验和理论结果。当坚硬的球形体(此处是钢玻璃或氮化硅球)带有光滑表面的硬球体时,由于塑料流而具有名义平坦但仍然粗糙的球形 - 杯状压痕,因此将表面缩进。但是,缩进区域的表面粗糙度并非完全扁平。粗糙度的长波长(大量渗透)含量是由原始(铝)表面的粗糙度产生的,但现在塑料变形。短长尺度的粗糙度,在塑性变形的大擦伤接触区域中,由硬球上的粗糙度和不均匀的塑料流。 我们使用边界元素方法对接触力学进行建模,并结合一个简单的数值过程,以考虑塑料流。该理论可以半定量描述塑性流对粗糙度的修饰。由于在大多数情况下,金属密封的流体泄漏取决于长波长粗糙度,因此我们预测可以根据此处采用的弹性塑料接触力学模型来估算泄漏。 某些玻璃状聚合物表面的塑性变形与我们观察到的铝的塑性变形大不相同,我们将其归因于强大的工作硬化和聚合物的不均匀塑料流。因此,考虑到此处提出的塑料流的数值程序通常不能应用于玻璃状聚合物。
We present experimental and theoretical results for the surface topography of a plastically deformed metallic (aluminum) block. When a hard spherical body (here a steel-, silica glass- or silicon nitride ball) with a smooth surface is indented in a metal block with a nominally flat, but still rough, surface, a spherical-cup-like indentation result due to plastic flow. The surface roughness in the indented region is, however, not entirely flattened. The long wavelength (macroasperity) content of the roughness result from the roughness on the original (aluminum) surface, but now plastically deformed. The roughness at short length scale, in the plastically deformed macroasperity contact regions, result from the roughness on the hard ball, and from inhomogeneous plastic flow. We model the contact mechanics using the boundary element method, combined with a simple numerical procedure to take into account the plastic flow. The theory can semi-quantitatively describe the modification of the roughness by the plastic flow. Since the fluid leakage of metallic seals in most cases is determined by the long wavelength roughness, we predict that the leakage can be estimated based on the elastoplastic contact mechanics model employed here. The plastic deformations of surfaces of some glassy polymers is very different from what we observed for aluminum, which we attribute to strong work-hardening and to inhomogeneous plastic flow for the polymers. Thus the numerical procedure to account for the plastic flow proposed here cannot be applied to glassy polymers in general.