Article ID Journal Published Year Pages File Type
1572754 Materials Characterization 2008 6 Pages PDF
Abstract

The age-hardening of an In-added Au–Ag–Cu–Pd alloy was examined by characterizing the hardening behavior, phase transformations and changes in microstructure, and elemental distribution during aging over the temperature range 200 to 500 °C. The major product phases, Ag-rich α1 and AuCu I, were formed homogeneously from the parent α0 phase by the transformation of precursor metastable phases in the grain interior. This led to a significant age-hardening response. A minor product phase, InPd, containing Cu and Zn, contributed to the overall hardness increase by initiating a grain boundary precipitation reaction. Continued long-time aging led to a hardness decrease due to overaging, which involved the formation of a lamellar microstructure composed of the stable Ag-rich α1 and AuCu I phases. At the longest aging time at 400 °C, the lamellar structure consumed the matrix α1 and AuCu I phases.

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Physical Sciences and Engineering Materials Science Materials Science (General)
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