Article ID Journal Published Year Pages File Type
1577318 Materials Science and Engineering: A 2012 7 Pages PDF
Abstract

The volume fraction of material that remained elastic as yielding developed in cast-to-shape tensile specimens of binary alloys with Al contents between 0.47 and 11.6 mass% was calculated using the Kocks–Mecking method of analysis. In the most dilute alloys the elastic fraction decreased rapidly to zero at a well-defined stress, suggesting that yielding was uniform across the specimen, whereas in the concentrated ones it decreased gradually over a wide range of stresses, suggesting that yielding developed first in the softer core of the casting while the harder outer layer, or skin, remained elastic. Comparison with specimens of the concentrated alloys which had a surface layer removed showed that the strain hardening behavior of the core resembled that of full specimens of the most dilute alloy. The maximum amount of elastic material in comparison with the most dilute alloy was used to define the area fraction covered by the skin, for each alloy. The skin covered between ∼10% and ∼30% of the cross section, the greater values for the concentrated alloys. The skin imposed an elastic constraint that delayed the development of full plasticity at the core.

► The area fraction of elastic skin was calculated for a range of Mg–Al alloys. ► The skin was defined using micro mechanistic concepts and tensile testing data. ► The elastic constraint imposed by the skin on the core is discussed. ► The skin covers ∼30% of the cross section of the most concentrated alloy.

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Physical Sciences and Engineering Materials Science Materials Science (General)
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