Journal of Materials Research and Technology (Jul 2022)
Strain hardening behavior and microstructure evolution of gradient-structured Cu-Al alloys with low stack fault energy
Abstract
Nanocrystallization can significantly improve the strength and hardness of metallic materials, but usually sacrifice ductility due to low work hardening capability. Heterostructured materials are an emerging class of materials with superior performances, because of their outstanding work hardening capability. In this work, a type of heterostructured material, a gradient structured Cu-Al alloy, was produced by surface mechanical attrition treatment (SMAT) at liquid nitrogen temperature. After SMAT processing, the yield strength was increased to more than 1.5 times, and the ductility remained almost unchanged. In conjunction with hetero-deformation induced (HDI) hardening, stacking fault energy is another important factor to increase the strain hardening in the system. Low stacking fault energy increased the density of stacking fault, and led to a finer spacing of nano twins (∼5.4 nm) and higher dislocation storage (8 × 1013 m−2) in the SMATed Cu-Al alloy at the intermediate strain stage. A significant up-turn of strain-hardening rate was also induced by low stacking fault energy.