38 resultados para Recrystallisation


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The data is the result of hot deformation tests conducted on magnesium alloy AZ31. It includes stress strain data for a range of deformation conditions and different initial microstructures. It also includes data for the developed grain size and the degree of dynamic recrystallisation.

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Changes in grain size, texture and misorientation distributions have been monitored during extensive normal grain growth in 3%Si steels. The boundary misorientation distributions deviate significantly from the Mackenzie relationship. Comparisons of correlated and uncorrelated distributions show large excesses of low angle boundaries. However, these are not a result of low energy boundaries being favoured during grain growth since the deviation diminishes as growth proceeds. The effect originates in the nucleation of grains in colonies of similar orientation during primary recrystallisation. A slight tendency for promotion of 60º boundaries may indicate some preference for the retention of lower energy twin boundaries during grain growth in silicon steel.

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The microstructure evolution and softening processes occurring in 22Cr-19Ni-3Mo austenitic and 21Cr-10Ni-3Mo duplex stainless steels deformed in torsion at 900 and 1200 °C were studied in the present work. Austenite was observed to soften in both steels via dynamic recovery (DRV) and dynamic recrystallisation (DRX) for the low and high deformation temperatures, respectively. At 900 °C, an "organised", self-screening austenite deformation substructure largely comprising microbands, locally accompanied by micro-shear bands, was formed. By contrast, a "random", accommodating austenite deformation substructure composed of equiaxed subgrains formed at 1200 °C. In the single-phase steel, DRX of austenite largely occurred through straininduced grain boundary migration accompanied by (multiple) twinning. In the duplex steel, this softening mechanism was complemented by the formation of DRX grains through subgrain growth in the austenite/ferrite interface regions and by large-scale subgrain coalescence. At 900 °C, the duplex steel displayed limited stress-assisted phase transformations between austenite and ferrite, characterised by the dissolution of the primary austenite, formation of Widmanstätten secondary austenite and gradual globularisation of the transformed regions with strain. The softening process within ferrite was classified as "extended DRV", characterised by a continuous increase in misorientations across the sub-boundaries with strain, for both deformation temperatures.

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Additions of rare earth elements to magnesium alloys are qualitatively reported in the literature to retard recrystallisation. However, their effect in the presence of other (non-rare earth) alloy additions has not been systematically shown nor has the effect been quantified. The microstructural restoration following the hot deformation of Mg-xZn-yRE (x = 2.5 and 5 wt.%, y = 0 and 1 wt.%, and RE = Gd and Y) alloys has been studied using double hit compression testing and microscopy. It was found that, in the absence of rare earth additions, increases in zinc level had a negligible influence on the kinetics of restoration and the microstructure developed both during extrusion and throughout double hit testing. Adding rare earth elements to Mg-Zn alloys was found to retard restoration of the microstructure and maintain finer recrystallised grains. However, in the Mg-Zn-RE alloys, increasing the zinc concentration from 2.5 wt.% to 5 wt.% accelerated the restoration process, most likely due to a depletion of rare earth elements from solid solution and modification of the particles present in the matrix.

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The evolution of flow stress and microstructure for wrought magnesium alloy AZ31 was characterised using torsion and compression testing. Temperatures ranging between 300°C and 450°C and strain rates between 0.001s-1 and 1s-1, were employed. Constitutive equations were developed for the flow stress at a strain of 1.0 for torsion, and 0.6 for compression. The flow stress was found to be strongly dependent on deformation mode at low strains. This can be explained in terms of the influence of the deformation accommodating processes of prismatic slip and dynamic recrystallisation (DRX). At higher strains, when the change in flow stress with strain is lower, the flow stress was relatively insensitive to deformation mode. Optical microscopy carried out on torsion samples quenched after twisting to strains between 0.2 and 2 revealed dynamically recrystallised (DRX) grains situated on pre-existing grain boundaries. The average grain size was reduced from 22.5μm down to 7.3 μm after a strain of 2, with the initial grain size being halved after a strain of 0.5.

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Single pass warm rolling and compression experiments were carried out from ambient to 800°C for ultra-low carbon (ULC) steel with ∼100 ppm carbon and interstitial free (IF) steels, both with two levels of silicon. Subsequently, annealing was done in order to recrystallize the deformed specimens. The main purpose of this study was to understand the effects of rolling temperature and silicon on stress responses and textures. This study comprises two main themes: flow stress and strain rate sensitivity during compression and shear banding and textures in warm rolled specimens. The effects of deformation temperature on in-grain shear bands were different between ULC-Si and IF-Si steels. As in previous work with more conventional steels, in-grain shear bands in the IF grade had low sensitivity to rolling temperature, while those in the ULC grade depended significantly on the deformation temperature. However, the temperature profile of shear banding in the ULC grade was approximately 150°C higher than in previous work. Deformation and recrystallisation textures for both IF and ULC grades depended on their rolling temperatures. The variation of both grain size and texture after annealing can be explained by the rise and fall of in-grain shear banding activity which is related to the strain rate sensitivity.

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The goal in the heat treatment or thermomechanical processing of steel is to improve the mechanical properties. For structural steel applications the general aim is to refine the ferrite grain size as this is the only method that improves both the strength and toughness simultaneously. For conventional hot rolling and accelerated cooling processes, it is difficult to refine the grain size below 5. μm without extensive alloying. However, it has been found that inducing transformation during deformation (i.e. dynamic transformation) can lead to grain sizes of the order of 1. μm, even in very simple steel compositions. The exact mechanism(s) for this transformation process are still being debated, and this has also been complicated by recent studies where such grain sizes can be obtained by static transformation from austenite that has been heavily deformed at low temperatures prior to the transformation. This chapter reviews the various major studies related in particular to dynamic transformation and considers the contributions from the deformed austenite structure developed prior to the transformation and the potential for dynamic recrystallisation of the ferrite. A key factor is proposed to be the early three-dimensional impingement of the ferrite which also provides an insight into cases where ultrafine grains are achieved statically.