4.7 Article

Grain size effect on tensile deformation behaviors of pure aluminum

Publisher

ELSEVIER SCIENCE SA
DOI: 10.1016/j.msea.2021.141504

Keywords

Grain size effect; Tensile properties; Hall-petch relationship; Strengthening mechanism

Funding

  1. National Natural Science Foundation of China [52071317]
  2. Open Research Fund from the State Key Laboratory of Rolling and Automation, Northeastern University [2020RALKFKT009]
  3. Youth Innovation Promotion Association of the Chinese Academy of Sciences [2017236]

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Grain refinement is an effective method to enhance the mechanical properties of materials, with the strengthening effect of high angle grain boundaries being almost three times that of low angle grain boundaries. The study classified the Hall-Petch relationships into three stages as the grain size decreased, showing a positive deviation in fine grain regime due to the increased specific surface area of HAGBs. Additionally, the positive deviation in ultrafine grained regime was influenced by an extra dislocation source limited strengthening mechanism up to 29 MPa.
Grain refinement is a very effective method to improve the mechanical properties of materials and attracts widespread interests among researchers. However, the grain size effect on the mechanical properties is still unclear due to the undesirable microstructure in ultrafine grained (UFG) materials. In the present work, series of ideal materials with average grain sizes range from 0.7 mu m to 30.0 mu m containing high fraction of high angle grain boundaries (HAGBs), equiaxed grains and low density of dislocations were produced by friction stir processing (FSP). It was found that the Hall-Petch relationships could be classified into three stages as the grain size reduced from coarse grain to UFG regimes, which were decided by the strengthening mechanisms during tensile deformation. The strengthening effect of HAGBs (71 MPa center dot mu m1/2) was almost three times of low angle grain boundaries (25 MPa center dot mu m1/2), resulting in the positive deviation of Hall-Petch slope in fine grain regime by the increased specific surface area of HAGBs. The further positive deviation of the Hall-Petch slope in UFG regime was affected by the occurrence of an extra dislocation source limited strengthening mechanism, which was up to 29 MPa and reached to about 20% of the yield strength. The increased recovery rate of dislocations at HAGBs contributed to the decrease of mobile dislocation density, leading to the losing of work hardening in UFG regime during tensile deformation.

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