info:eu-repo/semantics/article
Influence of Strain Amplitude on the Microstructural Evolution and Flow Properties of Copper Processed by Multidirectional Forging
Fecha
2020-04Registro en:
Alves Flausino, Paula Cibely; Landim Nassif, Maria Elisa; de Castro Bubani, Franco; Pereira, Pedro Henrique R.; Paulino Aguilar, Maria Teresa; et al.; Influence of Strain Amplitude on the Microstructural Evolution and Flow Properties of Copper Processed by Multidirectional Forging; Wiley VCH Verlag; Advanced Engineering Materials (print); 22; 4; 4-2020; 1-13
1438-1656
CONICET Digital
CONICET
Autor
Alves Flausino, Paula Cibely
Landim Nassif, Maria Elisa
de Castro Bubani, Franco
Pereira, Pedro Henrique R.
Paulino Aguilar, Maria Teresa
Cetlin, Paulo Roberto
Resumen
Commercial-purity copper (99.8%) is processed by multidirectional forging (MDF) using strain amplitudes per compression (Δε) of 0.15 and 0.30, leading to accumulated strains (ε) of up to ≈10.8. It is shown that increasing the accumulated strain causes continuous reactions at the substructural level, involving the progressive evolution of dislocation arrangements toward structures having high misorientation angles. This evolution depends upon the strain amplitude in MDF processing and is characterized by the fragmentation of the original grains due to formation and intersection of micro shear bands (MSBs) assisted by dynamic recovery processes. Higher Δε enhances the “monotonic” character of processing, resulting in a higher fraction of MSBs and band intersections, increased work hardening, flow stresses, and dislocation density, lower cell/subgrain and grain sizes, and faster grain refinement kinetics, compared with MDF under lower Δε. The yield strength of copper, measured along a direction orthogonal to that of the previous compression step, is lower than the flow stress at the end of this compression step, and this behavior becomes more prominent with increasing ε and Δε.