Efficient access to ultrafine crystalline metastable-β titanium alloy via dual-phase recrystallization competition
Xudong Kang, Zhaoxin Du, Zhen Wang, Zhiyong Yue, Shaojun Wang, Jie Li, Tianhao Gong, Jun Cheng, Jingshun Liu, Shuzhi Zhang
Abstract
In order to reduce the deformation resistance, the rolling process of metastable β titanium alloys is generally carried out in the β single-phase state, which causes the problem of non-uniform grain size during the subsequent annealing process, thus affecting the alloy properties. Here we first solution-treated the as-cast Ti–15Mo–3Al-2.7Nb-0.2Si alloy at 740 °C to obtain α + β phase, then cold rolled it with a reduction of 60 %, and finally annealed it at 710–810 °C for 2–240min. Characterization of the annealed metastable β alloy revealed that α phase was involved in the rolling deformation at the same time and recrystallized on the β matrix during the subsequent annealing process, known as equiaxial dispersion, which impeded the recrystallization of the β grains, and ultimately an ultrafine crystalline microstructure of α + β phases with an average grain size of less than 2 μm was obtained.