Journal of Materials Research and Technology (Jul 2024)
Role of grain size in the evolution of stress-induced martensite and the tensile deformation behavior of Ti-7333 alloy
Abstract
The evolution of martensite and the tensile deformation behavior of Ti-7333 alloy with different β grain size was studied. It is found that the β grain size (45–260 μm) significantly affects the triggering stress of stress-induced α″ martensite (SIMα″), and then affects the distribution and morphology of α″ martensite. At the initial stage of deformation, the larger β grain can inhibit the stress-induced secondary α″ martensitic transformation and the formation of α″ twinning. While under the same strain, the stress-induced martensite and martensite twinning can be activated simultaneously in the alloy with the smaller β grain, including {111}α″ type Ⅰ twinning, {130}α″ compound twinning, α″ type Ⅱ twinning, {021}α″ type Ⅱ twinning, which can effectively accommodate localized strains and improve the work hardening rate of Ti-7333 alloy. When the β grain size varies in the range of 45–84 μm, there is a higher work hardening plateau in the deformation stage II of Ti-7333 alloy. The yield strength and β grain size are in accordance with the Hall-Petch relation. As the grain size increases to 128 even to 260 μm, the work hardening rate continues to decrease and the yield strength inversely increases. It is demonstrated that the triggering stress for SIMα″ exhibits U-shaped fluctuations as β grain size increases, and the inflection point of Ti-7333 alloy is between 84 μm and 260 μm.