4.6 Article

Effect of friction stir processing on tensile and fracture behaviour of AZ91 alloy

Journal

JOURNAL OF MATERIALS PROCESSING TECHNOLOGY
Volume 248, Issue -, Pages 8-17

Publisher

ELSEVIER SCIENCE SA
DOI: 10.1016/j.jmatprotec.2017.05.001

Keywords

Microstructure variation; Multipass FSP; AZ91 alloy; Tensile properties; Apparent fracture toughness

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Multipass friction stir processing (FSP) was performed on as-cast (AC) AZ91 magnesium alloy with different tool probe lengths to introduce layered microstructure through the thickness. Three microstructural variations were developed. They were, half thickness fine grain microstructure (HFG), surface modified-fine grain microstructure (SFG) and full thickness fine grain microstructure (FFG). FSP was performed at tool rotation rate of 720 rpm and transverse speed of 150 mm/min. The coarse alpha-Mg dendrites of 100 tun were refined to approximately 2 tun. Network of beta-Mg17Al12 interdendritic particles were broken and distributed uniformly after multipass FSP. Tensile test and notch fracture toughness test were conducted to understand the effect of layered microstructure on mechanical properties. The tensile properties, namely, yield strength, tensile strength and percentage elongation of AC material were found to be 92 MPa, 100 MPa and 0.8% respectively and the corresponding values for FFG were improved to 242 MPa, 327 MPa and 4.7%. For HFG and SFG, these values were found to follow the rule of mixture. Similarly, apparent fracture toughness (K-Q) values of single edge notch bend (SENB) specimen without precrack were compared and the results showed improvement from 6.2 MPaVm in AC to 12.3 MPaVm in FFG.

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