4.5 Article

Correlating Hardness Retention and Phase Transformations of Al and Mg Cast Alloys for Aerospace Applications

Journal

JOURNAL OF MATERIALS ENGINEERING AND PERFORMANCE
Volume 24, Issue 3, Pages 1365-1378

Publisher

SPRINGER
DOI: 10.1007/s11665-015-1392-6

Keywords

Al/Mg cast alloys; dilatometer; electrical resistivity; hardness retention; mechanical properties; phase transformation

Funding

  1. Materials for Energy End Use in Transformation Program of Natural Resources Canada

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The methodology based on correlating hardness and phase transformations was developed and applied to determine the maximum temperature of hardness retention of selected Al-based and Mg-based alloys for aerospace applications. The Al alloys: A356, F357, and C355 experienced 34-66% reduction of the initial hardness, in comparison to 4-22% hardness reduction observed in Mg alloys: QE22A, EV31A, ZE41A, and WE43B after the same annealing to 450 degrees C. For Al alloys the hardness reduction showed a steep transition between 220 and 238 degrees C. In contrast, Mg alloys showed a gradual hardness decrease occurring at somewhat higher temperatures between 238 and 250 degrees C. The hardness data were correlated with corresponding phase transformation kinetics examined by dilatometer and electrical resistivity measurements. Although Mg alloys preserved hardness to higher temperatures, their room temperature tensile strength and hardness were lower than Al alloys. The experimental methodology used in the present studies appears to be very useful in evaluating the softening temperature of commercial Al- and Mg-based alloys, permitting to assess their suitability for high-temperature applications.

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