Article ID | Journal | Published Year | Pages | File Type |
---|---|---|---|---|
1605680 | Journal of Alloys and Compounds | 2016 | 8 Pages |
Abstract
The effect of stacking fault energy (SFE) on mechanical properties and annealing behavior of brasses was studied in Cu-20Zn alloy (SFE â¼18Â mJ/m2) and Cu-20Zn-1.2Si alloy (SFE â¼9Â mJ/m2) as well as Cu-20Zn-1.9Si alloy (SFE â¼6Â mJ/m2) alloy. These brasses have been rolled at room temperature up to different thickness reductions. The significant improvement of strength in Cu-20Zn-1.9Si alloy is attributed to the formation of fine grains and high densities of dislocations and deformation twins by decreasing the SFE. Thermal stability is enhanced due to the reductions of dislocation mobility and grain boundaries migration during annealing by a decrease in SFE and addition of Si. High fractions of the {236} ã385ã Brass-R and (55; 30; 0) in Cu-20Zn-1.9Si alloy with lower SFE should be ascribed to the substantial Brass texture in deformed microstructures. Fine grains, deformation twins and abundant annealing twins were introduced into Cu-20Zn-1.9Si alloy by decreasing the SFE, resulting in superior strength-ductility combination.
Related Topics
Physical Sciences and Engineering
Materials Science
Metals and Alloys
Authors
X.K. Zhang, X.Y. Yang, W. Chen, J. Qin, J.P. Fouse,