Tribology Webinars

New Methodologies in Nanoindentation Creep

Learn how new feedback algorithms and elevated-temperature SRJTs improve creep lifetime predictions 


Accurately predicting creep behavior using nanomechanical testing

Traditional creep testing is time- and resource-intensive. Nanoindentation creep testing is more efficient, but has historically been limited in its accuracy due to the influx of fresh material as the contact area grows during indentation. Recent developments have worked to combat this limitation.

Watch this on-demand webinar to see:

  • How new displacement control feedback algorithms improve time-dependent measurements on the TI 990 TriboIndenter.
  • Recent work combining throughput, high-temperature indentation strain rate jump tests (SRJT) with only a few bulk dead-load creep tests to determine creep lifetime.
  • Experimental datasets from Grade 91, FeCrAl, and oxide dispersion strengthened (ODS) steels that have been engineered for service under extreme conditions.

Abstracts

Advanced control methods for time dependence on the Bruker TI 990

Modern structural materials assessment demands high-throughput techniques with limited material. This is particularly challenging for time and temperature-dependent deformation of materials as traditional creep methods require a significant investment in time, personnel, equipment, and a relatively large volume of material.

Nanoindentation creep tests have long been used as a validation mechanism but have some drawbacks, including the influx of fresh material as the contact area grows during the indentation process. This is particularly an issue when the properties of interest may only exist near the surface. Here, new displacement control feedback algorithms are demonstrated that allow for the measurement of stress-relaxation in a drift-free manner.

Find out more about the technology featured in this webinar or our other solutions for nanomechanical testing:

High throughput assessment of creep behavior of advanced nuclear reactor alloys by nanoindentation

Current polycrystalline deformation models lack the spatially-resolved experimental quantification of dislocation cross-slip vs. dislocation climb-based mechanisms needed to address realistic operating temperatures for heterogeneous microstructures for service in nuclear reactors. This recent work demonstrates that a combination of high-throughput, high-temperature indentation Strain Rate Jump Tests (SRJT) and a few bulk dead-load creep tests is sufficient to determine creep lifetime in Grade 91 ferritic-martensitic alloy. 

This combination of techniques has the potential for order-of-magnitude improvements in the time necessary to determine creep time to rupture and subsequent alloy design and qualification. Using a combined model/experiment approach, this testing provides the data needed to calculate creep lifetime predictions based on the well-established Larson-Miller Parameter (LMP). This stands in stark contrast to the dozens of bulk samples currently needed for a state-of-the-art creep data set. 

We show that elevated temperature strain rate jump testing can provide insight into the critical parameters (strain rate or stress exponent, activation volume, activation energy for diffusion) that describe the site-specific, or aggregate dominant creep mechanisms for a given set of creep conditions.  We will describe the transitions in mechanisms between room and elevated temperatures in terms of a microstructurally-informed model, and experimental data sets from Grade 91, FeCrAl, and Oxide Dispersion Strengthened (ODS) steels that have been engineered for service under extreme conditions.

Authors: 

  • Nathan A. Mara, University of Minnesota-Twin Cities
  • Minh-Tam Hoang, University of Minnesota-Twin Cities
  • Moujhuri Sau, University of Minnesota-Twin Cities
  • Kevin Schmalbach, Bruker Nano Surfaces
  • Eric Hintsala, Bruker Nano Surfaces
  • Douglas Stauffer, Bruker Nano Surfaces
  • Jobin K. Joy, Los Alamos National Laboratory
  • Laurent Capolungo, Los Alamos National Laboratory
Input value is invalid.

The full-length recording of this presentation is available for on-demand viewing.

 

Please enter your first name
Please enter your last name
Please enter your e-mail address
Please enter a valid phone number
Please enter your Company/Institution
What best describes your current interest?
Please add me to your email subscription list so I can receive webinar invitations, product announcements and events near me.
Please accept the Terms and Conditions

             Privacy Notice   Terms of Use


Note: Page will refresh upon submission; afterward, you may need to scroll down to see the video access link.

* Please fill out the mandatory fields.

Webinar Recording is Now Available.


Note:
If you close or exit this page, you will not be able to reopen this confirmation window without re-submitting the form. Please save this access link to bypass the form in future visits.

Speakers

Douglas Stauffer, Ph.D.

Senior Manager of NI Applications Development

Douglas Stauffer, Ph.D. is the Senior Manager for Applications Development for the Hysitron product lines at Bruker Nano, Inc. In short, he manages the internal testing laboratory, engages in collaborations, and assists with sales-related activities with respect to nanomechanical testing techniques. He works with a wide variety of professionals in his role, ranging from professors studying incipient events at very small length scales to industrial manufacturing of 300mm wafers for logic and memory

His current research focus is on developing new techniques for understanding structure and processing relationships with regard to nanomechanical performance. These relationships and techniques can then be applied to a wide range of applications that include both applied and fundamental studies for assessing component and microstructure capabilities to resist failure. These techniques include in and ex-situ testing and the development of in operando type experiments, to gain insight into the role that plasticity and fracture play in the varying failure regimes under operating conditions.

Douglas received his Ph.D. in Materials Science from the University of Minnesota in 2011. He then joined the R&D department as a Senior Staff Scientist working in instrumentation and applications at Hysitron. Hysitron was acquired by Bruker Nano in January 2017.

Prof. Nathan Mara, University of Minnesota

Dr. Nathan Mara joined the CEMS faculty in 2017, and came to CEMS after 12 years at the Center for Integrated Nanotechnologies (CINT) at Los Alamos National Laboratory (LANL). There, he was a co-director of the Institute for Materials Science at LANL, and Thrust Leader for the Nanoscale Electronics and Mechanics thrust at CINT. His research focuses on the relationship between microstructure and mechanical behavior at the nanoscale, with an emphasis on structural applications in extreme environments such as high temperature, stresses, strain rates, and radiation environments. Dr. Mara is the past chairman (chair 2013-2015) of the Nanomechanical Materials Behavior Committee of TMS, and has published ~180 peer-reviewed journal articles spanning topics from synthesis of bulk nanocomposites to performance of advanced materials under extreme conditions and has been cited ~5848 times since 2019 (Google Scholar). He received the TMS Young Leader’s Professional Development Award in 2012, the LANL Distinguished Mentor Performance Award in 2010 for his dedication to undergraduate and graduate student education at LANL, and the 2017 International Journal of Plasticity Young Investigator Award for his contributions to modeling plastic deformation and mechanisms of metals and nanocomposites. He a 2023 TMS Brimacombe Medalist, and is Chair of the Minnesota state chapter of ASM International.