Article ID | Journal | Published Year | Pages | File Type |
---|---|---|---|---|
7999678 | Journal of Alloys and Compounds | 2015 | 27 Pages |
Abstract
A coarse grained biocompatible Ti-16.1Nb (wt.%) alloy was used to study the impact of severe plastic deformation on microstructural changes, phase transformations, and mechanical properties. The starting material, showing a rather low value of Young's modulus (66 GPa), contained orthorhombic αⳠmartensite. Hydrostatic pressure of 4 GPa solely yields a partial transformation to the Ï-phase; increasing the pressure to 8 GPa increases the volume fraction of the Ï-phase and causes a concomitant increase of Young's modulus. By processing samples through high pressure torsion at room temperature, i.e. applying both hydrostatic pressure and shear deformation, a nanocrystalline structure was obtained. The samples almost exclusively contained the Ï-phase and showed rather high values of Young's modulus (up to 130 GPa) and hardness (up to 4.0 GPa). The Ï-phase formed during high pressure torsion revealed stability upon unloading. However, upon heating to about 500 °C the Ï-phase decomposes into a phase mixture of hexagonal α and body centred cubic β phases which is still ultra-fine. Cold rolling and folding achieves a microstructure consisting of Ï, α/αⲠand αⳠphases. Concomitant decrease of grain size and increase of defect density yield a hardness (3.3 GPa) which is smaller than that of high pressure torsion but a Young's modulus of about 100 GPa being closer to that of the initial material.
Related Topics
Physical Sciences and Engineering
Materials Science
Metals and Alloys
Authors
Ajit Panigrahi, Matthias Bönisch, Thomas Waitz, Erhard Schafler, Mariana Calin, Jürgen Eckert, Werner Skrotzki, Michael Zehetbauer,