4.6 Article

Hot Deformation Behaviors in Ti-6Al-4V/(TiB + TiC) Composites

Journal

ACTA METALLURGICA SINICA-ENGLISH LETTERS
Volume 34, Issue 12, Pages 1747-1757

Publisher

CHINESE ACAD SCIENCES, INST METAL RESEARCH
DOI: 10.1007/s40195-021-01221-5

Keywords

Ti-6Al-4V/(TiC + TiB) composites; Hot deformation; Flow stress behavior; Processing map

Funding

  1. General project of Education Department of Liaoning Province [LQGD2019001]
  2. Natural Science Foundation of China [51805335]

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Thermal compression testing of particle-reinforced titanium matrix composites was conducted, revealing a decrease in flow stress with increasing deformation temperature and an increase with increasing strain rate. A hot processing map was established to determine optimal thermal deformation parameters and corresponding microstructural characteristics.
Thermal compression testing was investigated using the Gleeble 3800 thermal simulator, and thermal deformation behavior of particle-reinforced titanium matrix composites (TMCs) was studied under deformation temperatures of 750-900 degrees C, strain rates of 0.001-1 s(-1), and experimental deformation of 60%. According to obtained flow stress curves, the hot deformation characteristics were analyzed. Based on the Arrhenius hyperbolic sinusoidal model, the constitutive equation at high temperature was established. Based on the theory of dynamic material models, a hot processing map of TMCs at high temperature was established, and the peak region of power dissipation rate and the instability region in the hot processing map were both determined. At the same time, the corresponding microstructures in the peak power dissipation rate and rheological instability regions were observed. The results showed that flow stress decreased with increasing deformation temperature and increased with increasing strain rate. The thermal deformation activation energy of titanium matrix composites was 301.8 kJ/mol. The Ti-6Al-4V/(TiB + TiC) composites possessed only one instability zone under high-temperature compression at a strain of 0.5, with corresponding temperatures at 750-840 degrees C and strain rates at 0.1-1 s(-1). The optimal thermal deformation parameters included corresponding temperatures of 830-880 degrees C and strain rates of 0.001-0.05 s(-1). The microstructures corresponding to optimal hot working parameters in processing maps were more homogeneous than the microstructures in the instability zone, including the distribution uniformity of reinforcement and the degree of dynamic recrystallization, and no instability phenomena including abnormal grain growth, microcracks or intensive fracture of reinforcements were found, indicating that the hot processing map had a positive guiding effect on the option of desirable material thermal-working parameters.

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