Author:
Xu Hong,Zhou You,Zou Yu-Jie,Liu Meng,Guo Zhi-Peng,Ren Si-Yu,Yan Rong-Hui,Cheng Xiu-Ming
Abstract
In this work, the tensile deformation behavior of an as-extruded AZ80 magnesium alloy under pulsed current (PC) was investigated based on microstructure observations. We found that compared with the tensile tests at room temperature (RT) and given temperature (GT), the flow stress is reduced due to both thermal and athermal effects of pulsed current. A quasi-in-situ electron backscatter diffraction (EBSD) analysis reveals that at the same strain, the geometrically necessary dislocation (GND) density of the RT sample is the highest, followed by the GT sample and the PC sample. This proves that the athermal effect can promote the annihilation of dislocations and slow down dislocation pileup, which reduces the flow stress. In addition, the twinning behavior under different deformation conditions was studied; the twins are {10−12} tension twins, which are activated with the assistance of local stress. We found that the twin fraction in the PC sample is lower than that in the RT and GT samples, due to the least accumulation of GNDs at grain boundaries, which decreases the nucleation of {10−12} tension twins.
Subject
General Materials Science
Cited by
4 articles.
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