Journal of Magnesium and Alloys (Feb 2025)

Creep properties and fracture behavior of AZ31B extruded sheets with mixed-grain microstructures of different morphologies

  • Xiaoxia Zhang,
  • Ming Li,
  • Hongxia Wang,
  • Jiao Cui,
  • Lei Song,
  • Naidong Ren,
  • Lifei Wang,
  • Weili Cheng,
  • Kwangseon Shin

Journal volume & issue
Vol. 13, no. 2
pp. 777 – 791

Abstract

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In this work, AZ31B extruded sheets with mixed-grain microstructures were prepared through extrusion. Samples of mixed-grain microstructure with different morphologies were selected from the AZ31B extruded sheets (referred to as M1 and M2 samples, respectively). The creep tests were performed on these samples at the temperature range of 150–200 °C, and the stress level range of 50–100 MPa. The creep properties and fracture behavior of AZ31 extruded sheets with mixed-grain microstructures were studied. Results showed that the creep properties of the M2 sample always outperformed that of the M1 sample and M1 and M2 samples’ creep was dominated by dislocation movement. The creep rate of M2 samples (1.5 × 10-7 ± 1.1 × 10-10 s-1) is an order of magnitude lower than that of M1 samples (4.8 × 10-6 ± 8.1 × 10-10 s-1) at 200 °C under 50 MPa The high activity of basal slip and softening mechanism in the M1 sample significantly accelerated creep, resulting in a relatively high creep rate. Moreover, the stress concentration within the M1 sample caused by deformation incompatibility, increased the initiation and propagation of voids, ultimately leading to fracture and poorer creep performance. However, the numerous <10 µm fine grains surrounding deformed coarse grains in the M2 sample facilitated better coordination of deformation through dislocation slip, effectively slowing down the initiation of voids during the creep process. Meanwhile, the strain was uniformly distributed within each grain, mitigating stress concentration, inhibiting voids propagation, and contributing to the superior creep resistance of the M2 sample.

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