Article ID Journal Published Year Pages File Type
1570771 Materials Characterization 2016 10 Pages PDF
Abstract

•Significant quench sensitivity observed in AA6060 alloy after 30 min natural ageing•Prolonged natural ageing increased hardness and reduced QS.•Low dispersoid density leads to insignificant QS from non-hardening precipitates.•Vacancy supersaturation identified as a contributor to QS.

Quench sensitivity in Al–Mg–Si alloys has been largely attributed to the solute loss at the heterogeneous nucleation sites, primarily dispersoids, during slow cooling after extrusion. As such, the number density of dispersoids, the solute type and concentration are considered to be the key variables for the quench sensitivity. In this study, quench sensitivity and the influence of natural ageing in a lean Al–Mg–Si alloy, AA6060, which contains few dispersoids, have been investigated by hardness measurement, thermal analysis, transmission electron microscopy (TEM) and positron annihilation lifetime spectroscopy (PALS). It is shown that the quench sensitivity in this alloy is associated with the degree of supersaturation of vacancies after cooling. Due to vacancy annihilation and clustering during natural ageing, the quench sensitivity is more pronounced after a short natural ageing time (30 min) compared to a longer natural ageing time (24 h). Therefore, prolonged natural ageing not only leads to an increase in hardness, but can also have a positive effect on the quench sensitivity of lean Al–Mg–Si alloys.

Related Topics
Physical Sciences and Engineering Materials Science Materials Science (General)
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