Journal of Magnesium and Alloys (Apr 2025)

Towards age-hardening ability enhancement and high strength in Mg–Gd–Ag alloy by balancing grain refinement and weakening of dynamic precipitation

  • Zhenquan Yang,
  • Aibin Ma,
  • Bingqian Xu,
  • Guowei Wang,
  • Jinghua Jiang,
  • Jiapeng Sun

Journal volume & issue
Vol. 13, no. 4
pp. 1699 – 1720

Abstract

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The dilemma of choosing between superb grain boundary strengthening and excellent precipitation strengthening is commonly faced in the pursuit of high-strength age-hardenable Mg alloys. Here, a strategy for addressing this dilemma via the balance between grain refinement and weakening of dynamic precipitation is proposed and applied on a Mg–10.95Gd–2.06Ag (wt%) alloy treated by sequential processing of equal-channel angular pressing (ECAP), hot rolling and aging. The hot rolling leads to a noticeable dissolution of the dynamic precipitates intensively formed during prior ECAP, together with a tolerable grain growth. Meanwhile, numerous multi-twinning-induced lamellar bands (LBs) demarcated by coaxial grain boundaries (CGBs) subdivide the grains. For the first time, a quadruple twinning pattern for the formation of CGB with a misorientation of ∼135° is raised. During post-rolling aging, besides the common β’ and γ” precipitates and the β nano-particles whose Gd/Ag ratio is much lower than that of dynamically precipitated β particles, the β”/βT precipitates, CGB segregation, and stacking fault (SF)-associated segregation/γ’ precipitates within LBs, are also involved with the precipitation structure. Benefiting from this complex precipitation structure, a good age-hardening ability manifested by the aging-induced tensile yield strength (TYS) increment reaching 115 MPa is attained. Combining with the strengthening from grain boundaries, dislocations, solutes, and basal texture, a high TYS of 447 MPa is achieved.

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