Article ID | Journal | Published Year | Pages | File Type |
---|---|---|---|---|
10418823 | Journal of Materials Processing Technology | 2005 | 5 Pages |
Abstract
A finite element analysis was performed to study a novel hot rolling process by which ultra-fine grains (UFG) were achieved. FE analysis shows that the formation of ultra-fine grains was caused by a combination of severe undercooling and intensive deformation. It is found that undercooling was greater than 180Â K within the ultra-fine grained surface layer. It is suggested in this paper that severe undercooling could significantly enhance the efficiency of grain refinement in thermo-mechanical processes. Hence, ultra-fine grains were obtained via a relatively low reduction hot rolling process. Special hot compression tests, during which severe undercooling were introduced before deformation, were done to verify the effect of undercooling on grain refinement. Ultra-fine grains were achieved by compression at a reduction ratio of 0.7. The critical undercooling to achieve ultra-fine grains was about 200Â K.
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Authors
C.J. Huang, H. Zhang, Y.J. Nan, D.Z. Li, Y.Y. Li,