Abstract
Combined tension-torsion tests have been performed at constant stress ratios on En 25 steel, previously annealed and then subjected to a pre-stress in either tension or torsion. The post-yield behaviour showed marked room-temperature creep and, in general, both the axial- and the shear-strain components could be expressed by the logarithmic creep equation. The direction of the incremental strain-ratio vector was initially markedly different from that shown in the previous tests on annealed En 25 steel, but rotated towards that direction with increased stress. The yield locus subsequent to each pre-stress was established by fulfilling two requirements: that it must pass through the stress space normal to all the plastic-strain-increment vectors it encounters; that each yield stress should be an extrapolation from the curves of creep coefficient plotted against stress and stress plotted against ‘long time’ strain. The results show that a pre-stress hardens the material over that half of biaxial stress space bisected by the pre-stress axis and hardens it less or even softens it in the reverse half of that space. The cross-effect of a tensile pre-stress is greater than that of a torsion pre-stress and increasing the degree of pre-stress has a gradually reducing cross-effect.

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