Litcius/Paper detail

Microstructure Evolution and Deformation Mechanisms of As-Cast Antibacterial Ti6Al4V-5Cu Alloy for Isothermal Forging Process

Solomon Kerealme Yeshanew, Chunguang Bai, Qing Jia, Tong Xi, Zhiqiang Zhang, Diao-Feng Li, Zhizhou Xia, Rui Yang, Ke Yang

2022Materials11 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

The hot workability behavior of antibacterial Ti6Al4V-5Cu alloy was investigated using a hot compression experiment in the temperature range of 790–1040 °C and strain rate of 10−3–10 s−1 with a strain of 0.4. The deformation behavior of the alloy was characterized by Gleeble 3800 compression experiment, and the relationship among deformed microstructures and deformation parameters was established. The deformations of Ti6Al4V-5Cu alloy were temperature and strain rate-dependent. Higher temperature and lower strain rate made power dissipation efficiency (η) increase and reach 89%. The activation energies (Q) in the dual-phase (α + β) and single β phase regions were calculated as 175.43 and 159.03 kJ mol−1, respectively. In the dual (α + β) phase region, with an increase in strain rate, flow-softening behavior was dominated, however in the single β phase region such as processing at 940 °C. Flow stress increased slightly in which work-hardening behavior was dominated (especially between strain rates of 10−3–1 s−1). The deformation at various conditions exhibited different stress-strain profiles, providing an insight that work hardening and flow softening coexisted in Ti6Al4V-5Cu alloy. The relative intensity of oscillatory change in flow stress profile decreased as the strain rate decreased. The hot workability of Ti6Al4V-5Cu alloy was also accessed from the viewpoint of the sub-grain structure.

Topics & Concepts

Materials scienceFlow stressMicrostructureStrain rateTitanium alloyIsothermal processAlloyDeformation (meteorology)ForgingWork hardeningMetallurgyStrain hardening exponentHot workingComposite materialThermodynamicsPhysicsTitanium Alloys Microstructure and PropertiesMetallurgy and Material FormingAdvanced materials and composites