DescriptionCritical Resolved Shear Stress with Temperature.svg
English: The relationship between CRSS and temperature and strain rate. In region I, the athermal and thermally dependent components of CRSS are active. At the boundary between I and II, becomes 0. Finally, at very high temperatures, the CRSS decreases as diffusion processes start to play a significant role in plastic deformation. Increasing strain rate shifts the trend to the right and therefore does not increase CRSS in the intermediate temperatures of region II.
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