کد مقاله | کد نشریه | سال انتشار | مقاله انگلیسی | نسخه تمام متن |
---|---|---|---|---|
1697183 | 1012041 | 2011 | 7 صفحه PDF | دانلود رایگان |

Miniaturization of systems and devices continues unabated, which in turn requires the production of microscale components. Similar to the macroscale process, microextrusion provides a means to fabricate metallic micropins having characteristic dimensions on the order of 1 mm or less with a lower-cost, high-throughput process. In this paper, the effect of the specimen size and grain size on deformation during microextrusion is investigated. Microhardness, microstructure, and X-ray texture analyses show that when the grain size becomes comparable to the specimen feature size, together with miniaturization, penetration of the shear deformation occurs. As a result, the coarse-grained structure has higher hardness than the fine-grained structure, especially in the central regions of the cross-section for the two smallest size extrusion cases investigated, which have Ø0.76/0.57 mm and Ø1.5/1.0 mm dimensions before and after extrusion, respectively. For the largest size extrusion case investigated, Ø2.0/1.33 mm pins, the coarse-grained structure has a lower hardness than the fine-grained one, which is typical for macroscale processes and consistent with the Hall–Petch relationship.
► Microextrusion was performed on specimens with different specimen and grain sizes.
► Deformation was characterized by microhardness, X-ray, and microstructure analyses.
► Miniaturization resulted in higher hardness values especially in the inner regions.
► The penetration of shear deformation was observed for coarse-grained structures.
Journal: Journal of Manufacturing Processes - Volume 13, Issue 2, August 2011, Pages 153–159