4.7 Article

The microstructure evolution, texture weakening mechanism and mechanical properties of AZ80 Mg alloy processed by repetitive upsetting-extrusion with reduced deformation temperature

Journal

JOURNAL OF ALLOYS AND COMPOUNDS
Volume 883, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

ELSEVIER SCIENCE SA
DOI: 10.1016/j.jallcom.2021.160871

Keywords

AZ80 Mg alloy; Repetitive upsetting-extrusion; Texture; Mechanical properties; Anisotropy

Funding

  1. Program for the Outstanding Innovative Teams of Higher Learning Institutions of Shanxi
  2. National Major Science and Technology Projects for HIGH-GRADE CNC Machine Tools and Basic Manufacturing Equipment [2019ZX04022001-004]

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The repetitive upsetting-extrusion (RUE) method is utilized to improve the strength and toughness of AZ80 Mg rods while reducing tensile anisotropy. The resulting microstructure after RUE processing shows a refinement of grains and dynamic recrystallization, leading to enhancements in mechanical properties. The introduction of an interactive stress state promotes dispersion of fiber texture and contributes to the elimination of tensile yield anisotropy in extruded bars.
Repetitive upsetting-extrusion (RUE) is known as a processing method that effectively improves the properties of a billet without changing its initial shape. In this paper, one pass RUE with reduced deformation temperature (re-upsetting at 360 degrees C and secondary extrusion at 340 degrees C) and different extrusion speeds (0.5 and 1 mm/s) is implemented to improve the strength and toughness of AZ80 Mg rods, and simultaneous reduction in tensile anisotropy is achieved. Influences of one pass RUE method on the resulting microstructure and texture evolution of the alloy are investigated alongside their correlated impact on its mechanical properties. After RUE processing, the grain structure of AZ80 alloy is characterized by numerous fine dynamic recrystallized (DRXed) grains, combined with large unDRXed grains obtained at high extrusion speed or coarse DRXed grain bands obtained at low extrusion speed. Besides, beta-Mg17Al12 particles dynamically precipitated during deformation, acting as strong barrier against grain boundary migration through pinning effect. Through introduction of an interactive stress state, the RUE process promotes dispersion of the fiber texture that typically develops during the extrusion process. The key factor that promotes weakening of the fiber texture is derived from the refinement of basal orientated deformed grains, which form during upsetting deformation, into numerous non-basal orientated DRXed grains during early-stage extrusion. Compared with coarse deformed grains, these fine DRXed grains delay transformation of texture into the typical [10-10]-[11-20] fiber component. Grain refinement is implicated as the most significant factor with respect to simultaneous improvement of strength and toughness in the extruded rods, while tensile yield anisotropy in response to loading along the ED and TD is attributed to unDRXed grains with [10-10] fiber orientation. Compared to the as-cast state, extruded rods demonstrate increases in yield strength, ultimate tension strength, and elongation maximally up to similar to 2.6, similar to 2.2, and similar to 4.9 times, respectively. And when complete DRX structure is nearly achieved, the tensile yield anisotropy of extruded bar is effectively eliminated because the refined grains with relatively dispersed orientation inhibit the nucleation of tension twin and simultaneous enhance the Hall-Petch effect. (C) 2021 Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.

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