4.7 Article

Mechanical behavior and strengthening mechanisms in ultrafine grain precipitation-strengthened aluminum alloy

Journal

ACTA MATERIALIA
Volume 62, Issue -, Pages 141-155

Publisher

PERGAMON-ELSEVIER SCIENCE LTD
DOI: 10.1016/j.actamat.2013.09.042

Keywords

Al alloys; Precipitation; Strengthening mechanism; Ultrafine-grained materials; Atom-probe tomography

Funding

  1. Office of Naval Research [ONR N00014-12-1-0237]
  2. NSF-MRI [DMR-0420532]
  3. ONR-DURIP [N00014-0400798, N00014-0610539, N00014-0910781]
  4. National Science Foundation's MRSEC program [DMR-1121262]

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To provide insight into the relationships between precipitation phenomena, grain size and mechanical behavior in a complex precipitation-strengthened alloy system, Al 7075 alloy, a commonly used aluminum alloy, was selected as a model system in the present study. Ultrafine-grained (UFG) bulk materials were fabricated through cryomilling, degassing, hot isostatic pressing and extrusion, followed by a subsequent heat treatment. The mechanical behavior and microstructure of the materials were analyzed and compared directly to the coarse-grained (CG) counterpart. Three-dimensional atom-probe tomography was utilized to investigate the intermetallic precipitates and oxide dispersoids formed in the as-extruded UFG material. UFG 7075 exhibits higher strength than the CG 7075 alloy for each equivalent condition. After a T6 temper, the yield strength (YS) and ultimate tensile strength (UTS) of UFG 7075 achieved 734 and 774 MPa, respectively, which are similar to 120 MPa higher than those of the CG equivalent. The strength of as-extruded UFG 7075 (YS: 583 MPa, UTS: 631 MPa) is even higher than that of commercial 7075-T6. More importantly, the strengthening mechanisms in each material were established quantitatively for the first time for this complex precipitation-strengthened system, accounting for grain-boundary, dislocation, solid-solution, precipitation and oxide dispersoid strengthening contributions. Grain-boundary strengthening was the predominant mechanism in as-extruded UFG 7075, contributing a strength increment estimated to be 242 MPa, whereas Orowan precipitation strengthening was predominant in the as-extruded CG 7075 (similar to 102 MPa) and in the T6-tempered materials, and was estimated to contribute 472 and 414 MPa for CG-T6 and UFG-T6, respectively. (C) 2013 Acta Materialia Inc. Published by Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved.

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