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Influence of Decreased Temperature of Tensile Testing on the Annealing-Induced Hardening and Deformation-Induced Softening Effects in Ultrafine-Grained Al-0.4Zr Alloy.

Tatiana S OrlovaAydar M MavlyutovMaxim Yu MurashkinNariman A EnikeevAlexey D EvstifeevDinislam I SadykovMichael Yu Gutkin
Published in: Materials (Basel, Switzerland) (2022)
The influence of decreased temperature of tensile testing on annealing-induced hardening (AIH) and deformation-induced softening (DIS) effects has been studied in an ultrafine-grained (UFG) Al-Zr alloy produced by high-pressure torsion. We show that the UFG Al-Zr alloy demonstrates a DIS effect accompanied by a substantial increase in the elongation to failure δ (up to δ ≈ 30%) depending on the value of additional straining. Both the AIH and DIS effects weaken with a decrease in the tensile test temperature. The critical deformation temperatures were revealed at which the AIH and DIS effects are suppressed. The activation energy Q of plastic flow has been estimated for the UFG Al-Zr alloy in the as-processed, subsequently annealed and additionally strained states. It was shown that the annealing decreases the Q -value from ~80 kJ/mol to 23-28 kJ/mol, while the subsequent additional straining restores the initial Q -value. Alloying with Zr results in the expansion of the temperature range of the AIH effect manifestation to lower temperatures and results in the change in the Q -value in all of the studied states compared to the HPT-processed Al. The obtained Q -values and underlying flow mechanisms are discussed in correlation with specific microstructural features and in comparison to the UFG Al.
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