4.7 Article

Evading the strength-ductility trade-off at room temperature and achieving ultrahigh plasticity at 800°C in a TiAl alloy

Journal

ACTA MATERIALIA
Volume 225, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

PERGAMON-ELSEVIER SCIENCE LTD
DOI: 10.1016/j.actamat.2021.117585

Keywords

Pearlitic structure; Cellular response; TiAl alloy; Mechanical properties

Funding

  1. National Natural Science Foundation of China [51771150]
  2. Aeronautical Science Foundation of China [201936053001]

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This study developed two new microstructures, T-T and T-D structures, in the Ti-43.5Al-4Nb-1Mo-0.18 (TNM) alloy, which significantly improved the alloy's strength and ductility. The formation of deformation twins and the promotion of dynamic recrystallization were found to play important roles in enhancing the plasticity at both room temperature and elevated temperatures.
Improving the room temperature (RT) strength/ductility and hot-working capacity based on lamellar microstructures is of great significance for the practical application of TiAl alloys. However, the microstructure of these alloys has not been clearly identified yet. In this work, two new microstructures, here named triple-phase triple-state (T-T) and triple-phase dual-state (T-D) structures, were developed using a two-step heat treatment process in the Ti-43.5Al-4Nb-1Mo-0.18 (TNM) alloy, which also contains the pearlitic+like microstructure (PM) transformed through triggering a massive cellular response (CR). These two microstructures significantly improved the alloy strength. Furthermore, their ductility at RT and 800 degrees C was enhanced twice and 5, 6 times with respect to that of the lamellar microstructure with nano-scale interlamellar spacing, respectively. It was revealed that the formation of abundant deformation twins and their intersections in PMs during plastic deformation, cause prominent strain hardening and the dynamic Hall-Patch effect. This results in a simultaneous improvement of the RT strength and plasticity and promotes dynamic recrystallization at temperatures lower than 800 degrees C; thus, the plasticity is dramatically enhanced at elevated temperatures. This structural design strategy should be extendable to other TiAl systems that can undergo a CR and provides a promising new pathway for solving the severe engineering challenges caused by the low RT plasticity and poor hot-working capacity of TiAl alloys. (C) 2021 Acta Materialia Inc. Published by Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved.

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