Article ID | Journal | Published Year | Pages | File Type |
---|---|---|---|---|
5455972 | Materials Science and Engineering: A | 2017 | 13 Pages |
Abstract
The continuous casting-extrusion (CTE) process is a short-route technology for fabricating aluminum and aluminum alloy wires. A novel Al-1.44Mg-1.09Y alloy was prepared by CTE, and its mechanical properties and microstructure evolution were investigated at elevated temperatures to explore the hot tensile ductility of aluminum alloy wire. A true strain to failure of 1.159 was obtained at 773Â K and 1.67Ã10â2Â sâ1, and the present alloy exhibits high strain rate quasi-superplasticity. Microstructure observations reveal that it is difficult to realize the equiaxedness of elongated or textured grains through hot tensile deformation. A new deformation mechanism map (DMM) was constructed which predicts that dislocation climb at high stress dominates the high-temperature deformation process. This theoretical prediction using the DMM is in good agreement with experimental transmission-electron-microscopy results and with the estimated true stress exponent of 5 and the activation energy for deformation in the range 127.378â141.536Â kJÂ molâ1. A new three-dimensional histogram containing a dynamic recovery (DRV) or dynamic recrystallization factor was constructed to demonstrate that the DRV mechanism dominates the deformation. Most experimental results are consistent with prediction using this histogram.
Related Topics
Physical Sciences and Engineering
Materials Science
Materials Science (General)
Authors
Furong Cao, Xiaotong Zhu, Shuncheng Wang, Lu Shi, Guangming Xu, Jinglin Wen,