Metals (Jul 2024)

Examination of Novel Titanium-639 Alloy as a Means of Balancing Strength and Ductility through Molybdenum Addition Rather than Prolonged Aging Heat Treatment

  • Shiraz Mujahid,
  • Alireza Fadavi Boostani,
  • YubRaj Paudel,
  • Andrew Oppedal,
  • Bhasker Paliwal,
  • Hongjoo Rhee,
  • Haitham El Kadiri

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3390/met14070828
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 14, no. 7
p. 828

Abstract

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Manufacturing titanium alloys with simultaneous enhancement in strength and ductility has motivated extensive research into various strategies for regulating the arrangement and texture of α and β phases. The present study explores a novel α + β titanium alloy, TIMETAL 639 (Ti-639), produced by replacing a portion of vanadium in Ti-64 with molybdenum. The low diffusivity and β-stabilizing effects of molybdenum help retain bimodal characteristics within solution heat-treated Ti-639 microstructures. EBSD and TEM were used to examine β-phase evolution after thermal processing and recrystallization of new globular α grains within pre-existing colonies in a depleted bimodal microstructure. These depleted bimodal colonies in solution heat-treated Ti-639 also led to lower misorientation spreads and dislocation densities within neighboring primary α grains. Quasi-static compression along the plate normal direction demonstrated the ability of the depleted bimodal microstructure to simultaneously enhance strength and ductility in Ti-639 (~90 MPa stronger, ~6% higher failure strain) versus identically processed Ti-64. Only one solution heat-treatment step (1 h at 900 °C) is needed to achieve these properties in Ti-639, whereas comparable properties in Ti-64 required prolonged aging heat treatment (24 h at 600 °C) after the same solution heat-treatment step, making Ti-639 a viable α + β alloy candidate.

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