Article ID | Journal | Published Year | Pages | File Type |
---|---|---|---|---|
7981488 | Materials Science and Engineering: A | 2014 | 8 Pages |
Abstract
The ultimate tensile strength (ÏUTS) and fracture strain (εf) of Csf/Mg composites at temperatures just below and above the incipient melting temperature with different strain rates were determined by modified semi-solid tensile tests using a partial remelting approach. The variations of ÏUTS and εf were analyzed combining the discussion of damage mechanism. It was concluded that εf is more sensitive to the temperature and stain rate compared with ÏUTS. The maximum εf was achieved at the onset temperature for partial melting and at low strain rate, when the liquid fraction rose to 6%, the liquid phase at grain boundaries and interfaces played a dominant role in the deformation, and the composites exhibited very low ductility. The cavity initiation sites were closely related to the test temperature and strain rate, and the favored direction of crack propagation was highly dependent upon the strain rate.
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Authors
Jian Liu, Lehua Qi, Peng Liu, Juntao Guan, Jiming Zhou,