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Bauschinger effect

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Bauschinger effect

[′bau̇‚shiŋ·ər i′fekt]
(metallurgy)
A phenomenon by which the plastic deformation of a metal increases the tensile yield strength and decreases the compressive yield strength.
McGraw-Hill Dictionary of Scientific & Technical Terms, 6E, Copyright © 2003 by The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc.
References in periodicals archive
Bauschinger effect is not taken into consideration.
Bauschinger effect consideration, ...) and for twist springback this need even increases.
A Von-Mises' yield criterion, isotropic strain hardening with the PrandtlReuss theory has been taken into the consideration with Bauschinger effect and plane stress conditions.
It assumes the total stress range is equal to twice the yield stresses, so that Bauschinger effect is included.
Typically within the former parameter, the issue of isotropic and kinematic hardening (Vladimirov et al., 2009), Bauschinger effect (Gau and Kinzel, 2001), evolution of elastic properties (Sun and Wagoner, 2011) and elastic and plastic anisotropy (Li et al., 2002) were raised.
This is known as the Bauschinger effect, a well-known phenomenon.
& Yoshida, F., (1998), Simulation of springback in V bending process by elasto-plastic finite element method with consideration of Bauschinger effect, Met.
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