Article ID | Journal | Published Year | Pages | File Type |
---|---|---|---|---|
5456027 | Materials Science and Engineering: A | 2017 | 15 Pages |
Abstract
The anelastic strain measured using tensile loading-unloading loops in pure Mg and in binary solid solutions of Mg-Al and Mg-Zn, with contents of 0.5, 2 and 9Â at% Al and 0.8 and 2.3Â at% Zn, was correlated with available data for the area fractions and number densities of twins, for applied strains of up to 3%. For pure Mg, no anelastic strain was observed up to about 4% area fraction of twins and at an applied plastic strain of ~1.7Ã10â4, after which it increased rapidly, levelling off at a plastic strain of ~1%. The alloys followed the same pattern, but from much smaller minimum area fractions of twinning, <1% for Mg-Zn, and ~2% for Mg-Al, at applied plastic strains of ~2.5Ã10â4 and ~3.1Ã10â4, respectively. The anelastic strain saturated at a maximum value of ~0.002 for all alloys, save for the 9%Al for which it reached a much larger level (~0.004). The correlation with the number density of twins followed similar patterns. For a given alloy, the magnitude of the anelastic effect can be related to the applied stress in excess of that required to initiate microplasticity. The results are discussed in terms of the solid solution hardening and softening effects upon basal and prism slip in the dilute alloys, and of short range order upon slip and twinning in concentrated Mg-Zn.
Related Topics
Physical Sciences and Engineering
Materials Science
Materials Science (General)
Authors
D. Nagarajan, X. Ren, C.H. Cáceres,