Why creep is a function of Time?

AI Thread Summary
Creep is a time-dependent deformation process that occurs even under constant load and temperature due to microscopic mechanisms within materials. At the atomic level, diffusion creep involves the movement of vacancies and interstitials influenced by applied stress, which facilitates the flow of atoms and results in gradual deformation. The diffusion process requires time for atoms to travel the necessary distances to produce elongation, as described by the relationship between diffusion distance and time. Additionally, other creep mechanisms, such as dislocation creep, also necessitate time for atomic movement despite constant stress and temperature. Overall, the continuous deformation of materials under stable conditions is attributed to the inherent time-dependent nature of atomic processes.
koolraj09
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Hi all,
As suggested by the title, i wanted to know as to why creep is a function of time. Since for any component the load and temperature are constant, still it creeps. What happens there at microscopic level? Why does the solid component continues to deform slowly under constant load and temperature?

Thanks
 
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koolraj09 said:
Hi all,
As suggested by the title, i wanted to know as to why creep is a function of time. Since for any component the load and temperature are constant, still it creeps. What happens there at microscopic level? Why does the solid component continues to deform slowly under constant load and temperature?

Thanks
The solid may not be fully crystalline, and may contain microscopic amorphous regions that are capable of deforming like fluids.
 
Thanks for the response.
I am not able to connect the deformation w.r.t time due to these mechanisms. Say for example, the diffusion creep. In this, the diffusion process is a function of temperature. At any particular temperature, the diffusion should occur and then stop. Why does it continue at constant temperature and thus make a material deform as a function of time? Similarly if we consider dislocation creep, we don't increase the stress, then what makes the dislocation to further move around? After we reach a particular load and temperature, these things have no reason (from my perspective, currently) to move and make the material deform continuously w.r.t time.
 
koolraj09 said:
Thanks for the response.
I am not able to connect the deformation w.r.t time due to these mechanisms. Say for example, the diffusion creep. In this, the diffusion process is a function of temperature. At any particular temperature, the diffusion should occur and then stop. Why does it continue at constant temperature and thus make a material deform as a function of time? Similarly if we consider dislocation creep, we don't increase the stress, then what makes the dislocation to further move around? After we reach a particular load and temperature, these things have no reason (from my perspective, currently) to move and make the material deform continuously w.r.t time.

Hi
Diffusion Creep involves the flow of vacancies and interstitials through a crystal under the influence of applied stress. A tensile stress increases the separation of atoms on grain boundaries that are normal to the stress axis, and the Poisson contraction decreases the separation of atoms on grain boundaries that are parallel to the stress axis. The result is a driving force for diffusional transport of atoms from grain boundaries parallel to the tensile stress to those normal to the tensile stress (there is a flow of vacancies in the opposite direction). Such diffusion produces a plastic elongation.

Diffusion not only needs temperature, but also needs time. As you may know the diffusion distance is proportional to √Dt, where D is the diffusion coefficient. In the diffusion creep, as I described above, atoms should travel the required distance to produce elongation.

Similarly, other creep mechanisms also need time. In fact, creep is an "anelastic effect".
 
Hi materials,
Thanks for your response. I understood that diffusion is a function of time.
Secondly, atoms have to cross the activation energy to go to the vacancy site. But if the temperature and stress are uniform which is how the creep is defined, they why does an atom move to the vacancy?
 
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