Failure Mechanisms and Texture Evolution of Wrought AZ31B Magnesium at Temperatures Ranging from 25 C to 125 C

Failure mechanisms were studied in wrought AZ31B magnesium alloy under different strain paths and various temperatures. Optical micrographs were used to observe the formation of shear bands and regions of high twin density in samples strained under uniaxial, biaxial and plane strain conditions. Inte...

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Main Author: Scott, Jonathan Michael
Format: Others
Published: BYU ScholarsArchive 2012
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Online Access:https://scholarsarchive.byu.edu/etd/3135
https://scholarsarchive.byu.edu/cgi/viewcontent.cgi?article=4134&context=etd
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spelling ndltd-BGMYU2-oai-scholarsarchive.byu.edu-etd-41342019-05-16T03:05:56Z Failure Mechanisms and Texture Evolution of Wrought AZ31B Magnesium at Temperatures Ranging from 25 C to 125 C Scott, Jonathan Michael Failure mechanisms were studied in wrought AZ31B magnesium alloy under different strain paths and various temperatures. Optical micrographs were used to observe the formation of shear bands and regions of high twin density in samples strained under uniaxial, biaxial and plane strain conditions. Interrupted testing at 4% effective strain increments until failure was used to observe the evolution of the microstructure. Results showed that shear bands with a high percentage of twinned grains appeared early in the samples strained under biaxial or plane strain tension. These bands are similar to the failure region in uniaxial tension specimens. A forming limit diagram for AZ31B was developed from the strain data, showing that plane strain and biaxial tension had very similar limit strains, in contrast to materials like steel or aluminum alloys which typically have greater ductility in biaxial tension compared to plane strain tension. When the experiments are repeated at elevated forming temperatures of 75 C and 125 C there is no observable shear band formation. The forming limit diagrams for each temperature were created and showed a marked increase in biaxial tension formability, compared to plane strain tension. Optical microscopy showed no sign of any compression twins and very few tensile twins in samples strained in biaxial or plane strain tension, up to 12% effective strain. The lack of compression twins at these strain levels shows that the effect of temperature on critical resolved shear stress for < c&plus;a > slip is greater than previously expected. 2012-03-14T07:00:00Z text application/pdf https://scholarsarchive.byu.edu/etd/3135 https://scholarsarchive.byu.edu/cgi/viewcontent.cgi?article=4134&amp;context=etd http://lib.byu.edu/about/copyright/ All Theses and Dissertations BYU ScholarsArchive Jonathan Scott optical microscopy CRSS shear band compression twin Mechanical Engineering
collection NDLTD
format Others
sources NDLTD
topic Jonathan Scott
optical microscopy
CRSS
shear band
compression twin
Mechanical Engineering
spellingShingle Jonathan Scott
optical microscopy
CRSS
shear band
compression twin
Mechanical Engineering
Scott, Jonathan Michael
Failure Mechanisms and Texture Evolution of Wrought AZ31B Magnesium at Temperatures Ranging from 25 C to 125 C
description Failure mechanisms were studied in wrought AZ31B magnesium alloy under different strain paths and various temperatures. Optical micrographs were used to observe the formation of shear bands and regions of high twin density in samples strained under uniaxial, biaxial and plane strain conditions. Interrupted testing at 4% effective strain increments until failure was used to observe the evolution of the microstructure. Results showed that shear bands with a high percentage of twinned grains appeared early in the samples strained under biaxial or plane strain tension. These bands are similar to the failure region in uniaxial tension specimens. A forming limit diagram for AZ31B was developed from the strain data, showing that plane strain and biaxial tension had very similar limit strains, in contrast to materials like steel or aluminum alloys which typically have greater ductility in biaxial tension compared to plane strain tension. When the experiments are repeated at elevated forming temperatures of 75 C and 125 C there is no observable shear band formation. The forming limit diagrams for each temperature were created and showed a marked increase in biaxial tension formability, compared to plane strain tension. Optical microscopy showed no sign of any compression twins and very few tensile twins in samples strained in biaxial or plane strain tension, up to 12% effective strain. The lack of compression twins at these strain levels shows that the effect of temperature on critical resolved shear stress for < c&plus;a > slip is greater than previously expected.
author Scott, Jonathan Michael
author_facet Scott, Jonathan Michael
author_sort Scott, Jonathan Michael
title Failure Mechanisms and Texture Evolution of Wrought AZ31B Magnesium at Temperatures Ranging from 25 C to 125 C
title_short Failure Mechanisms and Texture Evolution of Wrought AZ31B Magnesium at Temperatures Ranging from 25 C to 125 C
title_full Failure Mechanisms and Texture Evolution of Wrought AZ31B Magnesium at Temperatures Ranging from 25 C to 125 C
title_fullStr Failure Mechanisms and Texture Evolution of Wrought AZ31B Magnesium at Temperatures Ranging from 25 C to 125 C
title_full_unstemmed Failure Mechanisms and Texture Evolution of Wrought AZ31B Magnesium at Temperatures Ranging from 25 C to 125 C
title_sort failure mechanisms and texture evolution of wrought az31b magnesium at temperatures ranging from 25 c to 125 c
publisher BYU ScholarsArchive
publishDate 2012
url https://scholarsarchive.byu.edu/etd/3135
https://scholarsarchive.byu.edu/cgi/viewcontent.cgi?article=4134&amp;context=etd
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