Substructural Alignment during ECAE Processing of an Al-0.1Mg Aluminium Alloy

An investigation has been carried out into the microstructures developed during the early stages of equal channel angular extrusion (ECAE) in a polycrystalline single-phase Al-0.13Mg alloy, with emphasis on the substructural alignment with respect to the die geometry and the crystallographic slip sy...

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Main Author: Yan Huang
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: MDPI AG 2016-07-01
Series:Metals
Subjects:
Online Access:http://www.mdpi.com/2075-4701/6/7/158
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spelling doaj-cc56fb04a2224b69b0c13c252966baeb2020-11-24T23:40:44ZengMDPI AGMetals2075-47012016-07-016715810.3390/met6070158met6070158Substructural Alignment during ECAE Processing of an Al-0.1Mg Aluminium AlloyYan Huang0BCAST, Institute of Materials and Manufacturing, Brunel University London, Uxbridge UB8 3PH, UKAn investigation has been carried out into the microstructures developed during the early stages of equal channel angular extrusion (ECAE) in a polycrystalline single-phase Al-0.13Mg alloy, with emphasis on the substructural alignment with respect to the die geometry and the crystallographic slip systems, which is essentially related to the grain refinement and texture development during deformation. The material was processed by ECAE at room temperature to three passes, via a 90° die. Microstructures were examined and characterized by EBSD. It was found that dislocation cell bands and microshear bands were respectively the most characteristic deformation structures of the first and second pass ECAE. Both formed across the whole specimen and to align approximately with the die shear plane, regardless of the orientation of individual grains. This confirmed that substructural alignment was in response to the direction of the maximum resolved shear stress rather than to the crystallographic slip systems. However, a significant fraction of material developed preferred orientations during deformation that allowed the coincidence between the crystallographic slip systems and the simple shear geometry to occur, which governed texture development in the material. The third pass deformation was characterized with the formation of a fibre structure with a significant fraction of high angle boundaries, being aligned at an angle to the extrusion direction, which was determined by the total shear strain applied.http://www.mdpi.com/2075-4701/6/7/158ECAEsimple sheardeformation structuresubstructural alignmentEBSD
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Yan Huang
spellingShingle Yan Huang
Substructural Alignment during ECAE Processing of an Al-0.1Mg Aluminium Alloy
Metals
ECAE
simple shear
deformation structure
substructural alignment
EBSD
author_facet Yan Huang
author_sort Yan Huang
title Substructural Alignment during ECAE Processing of an Al-0.1Mg Aluminium Alloy
title_short Substructural Alignment during ECAE Processing of an Al-0.1Mg Aluminium Alloy
title_full Substructural Alignment during ECAE Processing of an Al-0.1Mg Aluminium Alloy
title_fullStr Substructural Alignment during ECAE Processing of an Al-0.1Mg Aluminium Alloy
title_full_unstemmed Substructural Alignment during ECAE Processing of an Al-0.1Mg Aluminium Alloy
title_sort substructural alignment during ecae processing of an al-0.1mg aluminium alloy
publisher MDPI AG
series Metals
issn 2075-4701
publishDate 2016-07-01
description An investigation has been carried out into the microstructures developed during the early stages of equal channel angular extrusion (ECAE) in a polycrystalline single-phase Al-0.13Mg alloy, with emphasis on the substructural alignment with respect to the die geometry and the crystallographic slip systems, which is essentially related to the grain refinement and texture development during deformation. The material was processed by ECAE at room temperature to three passes, via a 90° die. Microstructures were examined and characterized by EBSD. It was found that dislocation cell bands and microshear bands were respectively the most characteristic deformation structures of the first and second pass ECAE. Both formed across the whole specimen and to align approximately with the die shear plane, regardless of the orientation of individual grains. This confirmed that substructural alignment was in response to the direction of the maximum resolved shear stress rather than to the crystallographic slip systems. However, a significant fraction of material developed preferred orientations during deformation that allowed the coincidence between the crystallographic slip systems and the simple shear geometry to occur, which governed texture development in the material. The third pass deformation was characterized with the formation of a fibre structure with a significant fraction of high angle boundaries, being aligned at an angle to the extrusion direction, which was determined by the total shear strain applied.
topic ECAE
simple shear
deformation structure
substructural alignment
EBSD
url http://www.mdpi.com/2075-4701/6/7/158
work_keys_str_mv AT yanhuang substructuralalignmentduringecaeprocessingofanal01mgaluminiumalloy
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