29 research outputs found

    Low-Cycle Fatigue of Ultra-Fine-Grained Cryomilled 5083 Aluminum Alloy

    Full text link
    The cyclic deformation behavior of cryomilled (CM) AA5083 alloys was compared to that of conventional AA5083-H131. The materials studied were a 100 pct CM alloy with a Gaussian grain size average of 315 nm and an alloy created by mixing 85 pct CM powder with 15 pct unmilled powder before consolidation to fabricate a plate with a bimodal grain size distribution with peak averages at 240 nm and 1.8 μm. Although the ultra-fine-grain (UFG) alloys exhibited considerably higher tensile strengths than those of the conventional material, the results from plastic-strain-controlled low-cycle fatigue tests demonstrate that all three materials exhibit identical fatigue lives across a range of plastic strain amplitudes. The CM materials exhibited softening during the first cycle, similar to other alloys produced by conventional powder metallurgy, followed by continual hardening to saturation before failure. The results reported in this study show that fatigue deformation in the CM material is accompanied by slight grain growth, pinning of dislocations at the grain boundaries, and grain rotation to produce macroscopic slip bands that localize strain, creating a single dominant fatigue crack. In contrast, the conventional alloy exhibits a cell structure and more diffuse fatigue damage accumulation

    Ultrafine grained plates of Al-Mg-Si alloy obtained by Incremental Equal Channel Angular Pressing : microstructure and mechanical properties

    Get PDF
    In this study, an Al-Mg-Si alloy was processed using via Incremental Equal Channel Angular Pressing (I-ECAP) in order to obtain homogenous, ultrafine grained plates with low anisotropy of the mechanical properties. This was the first attempt to process an Al-Mg-Si alloy using this technique. Samples in the form of 3 mm-thick square plates were subjected to I-ECAP with the 90˚ rotation around the axis normal to the surface of the plate between passes. Samples were investigated first in their initial state, then after a single pass of I-ECAP and finally after four such passes. Analyses of the microstructure and mechanical properties demonstrated that the I-ECAP method can be successfully applied in Al-Mg-Si alloys. The average grain size decreased from 15 - 19 µm in the initial state to below 1 µm after four I-ECAP passes. The fraction of high angle grain boundaries in the sample subjected to four I-ECAP passes lay within 53-57 % depending on the examined plane. The mechanism of grain refinement in Al-Mg-Si alloy was found to be distinctly different from that in pure aluminium with the grain rotation being more prominent than the grain subdivision, which was attributed to lower stacking fault energy and the reduced mobility of dislocations in the alloy. The ultimate tensile strength increased more than twice, whereas the yield strength - more than threefold. Additionally, the plates processed by I-ECAP exhibited low anisotropy of mechanical properties (in plane and across the thickness) in comparison to other SPD processing methods, which makes them attractive for further processing and applications

    Effect of heat treatment conditions on the dynamic strength and failure behavior of titanium alloy Ti-6Al-4V

    No full text
    The effect of heat treatment conditions on high rate mechanical properties of the (α+β\alpha +\beta) titanium alloy Ti-6Al-4V was investigated. Dependent on the solution annealing temperature, cooling rate and further annealing the strength and failure properties can be varied in a wide range. Microstructures obtained by annealing below the β\beta-transus followed by furnace cooling show balanced properties of high strength, deformability, and therefore the highest energy consumption under dynamic compressive loading, but the lowest hardness values. Instrumented impact tests on Charpy U-notch specimens reveal evidence for a less brittle behaviour combined with the highest absorbed energy for furnace cooled conditions, only

    Effect of strain-rate on the deformation response of D0 3 -ordered Fe 3 Al

    No full text
    The mechanical response of centrifugally cast Fe(3)A1 with the composition Fe-27A1 (at.%) containing microalloying additions of Nb, Zr, C, and B was investigated over a wide range of strain rates between 10(-4) and 10(3) s(-1) at room temperature. Tests were carried out in compression using a (i) screw-driven load frame, (ii) drop impact tester, and (iii) split-Hopkinson pressure bar at quasi-static, intermediate and dynamic strain rates respectively. Post deformation analysis was carried out by DSC, SEM/EBSD, TEM and micropillar deformation. In all instances, the stress-strain curves show initial hardening (-first 5% plastic strain) followed by a plateau in stress. A loss in work-hardening occurs at the highest strain rates examined (>10(3) s(-1)) and is likely associated with shear localization; in addition, (2 11) [11 1]-type twinning was observed at these high strain rates at room temperature. This observation is in line with previous theoretical calculations of the antiphase boundary (APB) energy. The consequence of a continuously increasing yield stress with strain rate and a loss in work hardening at the highest strain rates together yields a maximum in flow stress at the intermediate strain rate. (c) 2015 Acta Materialia Inc. Published by Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved

    Using the SMiLE Monitoring Infrastructure to Detect and Lower the Inefficiency of Parallel Applications

    No full text
    . The efficiency of a parallel execution is always underlined. Many parallel programs, however, don't run efficiently upon Networks of Workstations for a variety of reasons such as frequent accesses of remote memories. In this article we present a hardware-based monitoring system which uses a hardware monitor to keep watch of all of the underlying transactions on the network and allows tools to utilize the observed information about the memory behavior of parallel programs to manipulate their execution in run-time. This makes the parallel applications execute more efficiently upon clusters. Keywords: Performance monitor, Distributed shared memory, Load balancing, Thread migration, Performance optimization, SCI 1 Introduction Parallel processing is a key technology both for commercial applications and for research. Besides multiprocessor and multicomputer systems, COWs and NOWs play also an important role. Due to the synchronization and communication between processes as well..
    corecore