Article ID | Journal | Published Year | Pages | File Type |
---|---|---|---|---|
1555808 | Journal of Materials Science & Technology | 2015 | 10 Pages |
Abstract
The aim of this study was to evaluate the strain hardening and hot deformation behavior of as-extruded Mg-Zn-Mn (ZM31) magnesium alloy with varying Y contents (0.3, 3.2, and 6 wt%) via compression testing along the extrusion direction at room temperature, 200â°C and 300â°C. Texture and phases were identified by X-ray diffraction. Alloy ZM31â+â0.3Y consisted of a mixture of fine equiaxed grains and elongated grains with I-phase (Mg3YZn6); alloy ZM31â+â3.2Y contained I-phase and W-phase (Mg3Y2Zn3); alloy ZM31â+â6Y had long-period stacking-ordered (LPSO) X-phase (Mg12YZn) and Mg24Y5 particles. With increasing Y content the basal texture became weakened significantly. While alloys ZM31â+â0.3Y and ZM31â+â3.2Y exhibited a skewed true stress-true stain curve with a three-stage strain hardening feature caused by the occurrence of {101¯2} extension twinning, the true stress-true stain curve of alloy ZM31â+â6Y was normal due to the dislocation slip during compression. With increasing temperature the extent of skewness decreased. While the compressive yield stress, ultimate compressive stress, strain hardening exponent, and hardening capacity all decreased as the temperature increased, the retention of the high-temperature deformation resistance increased with increasing Y content mainly due to the presence of thermally-stable LPSO X-phase.
Related Topics
Physical Sciences and Engineering
Materials Science
Materials Chemistry
Authors
N. Tahreen, D.F. Zhang, F.S. Pan, X.Q. Jiang, D.Y. Li, D.L. Chen,