Mechanical Behavior of an Ultrafine/Nano Grained Magnesium Alloy

The application of magnesium alloys is greatly limited because of their relatively low strength and ductility. An effective way to improve the mechanical properties of magnesium alloy is to refine the grains. As the race for better materials performance is never ending, attempts to develop viable te...

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Main Authors: Seyed Mahmood Fatemi, Abbas Zarei-Hanzaki
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: University of Tehran 2017-06-01
Series:Journal of Ultrafine Grained and Nanostructured Materials
Subjects:
Online Access:http://jufgnsm.ut.ac.ir/article_62086_349ae5a6bcae01509c8c95413e286f2f.pdf
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spelling doaj-f6277009c64f408cbee92b7394823c832020-11-24T22:43:32ZengUniversity of TehranJournal of Ultrafine Grained and Nanostructured Materials2423-68452423-68372017-06-0150161510.7508/jufgnsm.2017.01.0262086Mechanical Behavior of an Ultrafine/Nano Grained Magnesium AlloySeyed Mahmood Fatemi0Abbas Zarei-Hanzaki1School of Mechanical Engineering, Shahid Rajaee Teacher Training University, 136-16785, Tehran, Iran.Department of Metallurgical & Materials Engineering, University of Tehran, 515-14395, Tehran, Iran.The application of magnesium alloys is greatly limited because of their relatively low strength and ductility. An effective way to improve the mechanical properties of magnesium alloy is to refine the grains. As the race for better materials performance is never ending, attempts to develop viable techniques for microstructure refinement continue. Further refining of grain size requires, however, application of extreme value of plastic deformation on material. In this work, an AZ31 wrought magnesium alloy was processed by employing multipass accumulative back extrusion process. The obtained microstructure, texture, and room temperature compressive properties were characterized and discussed. The results indicated that grains of 80 nm to 1 μm size were formed during accumulative back extrusion, where the mean grain size of the experimental material was reduced by applying successive ABE passes. The fraction of DRX increased and the mean grain size of the ABEed alloy markedly lowered, as subsequent passes were applied. This helped to explain the higher yield stress govern the occurrence of twinning during compressive loading. Compressive yield and maximum compressive strengths were measured to increase by applying successive extrusion passes, while the strain-to-fracture dropped. The evolution of mechanical properties was explained relying on the grain refinement effect as well as texture change.http://jufgnsm.ut.ac.ir/article_62086_349ae5a6bcae01509c8c95413e286f2f.pdfmagnesiumNano GrainTwinningcompression
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Seyed Mahmood Fatemi
Abbas Zarei-Hanzaki
spellingShingle Seyed Mahmood Fatemi
Abbas Zarei-Hanzaki
Mechanical Behavior of an Ultrafine/Nano Grained Magnesium Alloy
Journal of Ultrafine Grained and Nanostructured Materials
magnesium
Nano Grain
Twinning
compression
author_facet Seyed Mahmood Fatemi
Abbas Zarei-Hanzaki
author_sort Seyed Mahmood Fatemi
title Mechanical Behavior of an Ultrafine/Nano Grained Magnesium Alloy
title_short Mechanical Behavior of an Ultrafine/Nano Grained Magnesium Alloy
title_full Mechanical Behavior of an Ultrafine/Nano Grained Magnesium Alloy
title_fullStr Mechanical Behavior of an Ultrafine/Nano Grained Magnesium Alloy
title_full_unstemmed Mechanical Behavior of an Ultrafine/Nano Grained Magnesium Alloy
title_sort mechanical behavior of an ultrafine/nano grained magnesium alloy
publisher University of Tehran
series Journal of Ultrafine Grained and Nanostructured Materials
issn 2423-6845
2423-6837
publishDate 2017-06-01
description The application of magnesium alloys is greatly limited because of their relatively low strength and ductility. An effective way to improve the mechanical properties of magnesium alloy is to refine the grains. As the race for better materials performance is never ending, attempts to develop viable techniques for microstructure refinement continue. Further refining of grain size requires, however, application of extreme value of plastic deformation on material. In this work, an AZ31 wrought magnesium alloy was processed by employing multipass accumulative back extrusion process. The obtained microstructure, texture, and room temperature compressive properties were characterized and discussed. The results indicated that grains of 80 nm to 1 μm size were formed during accumulative back extrusion, where the mean grain size of the experimental material was reduced by applying successive ABE passes. The fraction of DRX increased and the mean grain size of the ABEed alloy markedly lowered, as subsequent passes were applied. This helped to explain the higher yield stress govern the occurrence of twinning during compressive loading. Compressive yield and maximum compressive strengths were measured to increase by applying successive extrusion passes, while the strain-to-fracture dropped. The evolution of mechanical properties was explained relying on the grain refinement effect as well as texture change.
topic magnesium
Nano Grain
Twinning
compression
url http://jufgnsm.ut.ac.ir/article_62086_349ae5a6bcae01509c8c95413e286f2f.pdf
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