Hot Deformation Behavior and Microstructure Evolution Mechanisms of Ti6Al4V Alloy under Hot Stamping Conditions
-
Published:2024-05-24
Issue:11
Volume:17
Page:2531
-
ISSN:1996-1944
-
Container-title:Materials
-
language:en
-
Short-container-title:Materials
Author:
Qu Mingjia12, Gu Zhengwei12ORCID, Li Xin12, Yi Lingling12, Li Yi12, Yu Ge12, Zhao Yafu3
Affiliation:
1. State Key Laboratory of Automobile Materials, Jilin University, Changchun 130025, China 2. Department of Materials Science and Engineering, Jilin University, Changchun 130025, China 3. CRRC Changchun Railway Vehicles Co., Ltd., Changchun 130022, China
Abstract
Through the study of the thermal rheological behavior of Ti6Al4V alloy at different temperatures (500 °C, 600 °C, 700 °C, and 800 °C) and different strain rates (0.1 s−1, 0.05 s−1, 0.01 s−1, and 0.005 s−1), a constitutive model was developed for Ti6Al4V alloy across a wide temperature range in the hot stamping process. The model’s correlation coefficient reached 0.9847, indicating its high predictive accuracy. Hot processing maps suitable for the hot stamping process of Ti6Al4V alloy were developed, demonstrating the significant impact of the strain rate on the hot formability of Ti6Al4V alloy. At higher strain rates (>0.05 s−1), the hot processing of Ti6Al4V alloy is less prone to instability. Combining hot processing maps with hot stamping experiments, it was found that the forming quality and thickness uniformity of parts improved significantly with the increase in stamping speed. The phase composition and microstructures of the forming parts under different heating temperature conditions have been investigated using SEM, EBSD, XRD, and TEM, and the maximum heating temperature of hot stamping forming was determined to be 875 °C. The recrystallization mechanism in hot stamping of Ti6Al4V alloys was proposed based on EBSD tests on different sections of a hot stamping formed box-shaped component. With increasing deformation, the effect of dynamic recrystallization (DRX) was enhanced. When the thinning rate reached 15%, DRX surpassed dynamic recovery (DRV) as the dominant softening mechanism. DRX grains at different thinning rates were formed through both discontinuous dynamic recrystallization (DDRX) and continuous dynamic recrystallization (CDRX), with CDRX always being the dominant mechanism.
Funder
National Natural Science Foundation of China Technology Development Program of Jilin Province Program for Jilin University Science and Technology Innovative Research Team
Reference38 articles.
1. Preparation, structural and microstructural characterization of Ti-25Ta-10Zr alloy for biomedical applications;Quadros;J. Mater. Res. Technol.,2019 2. Jin, B.Q., Wang, Q., Zhao, L.Z., Pan, A.J., Ding, X.F., Gao, W., Song, Y.F., and Zhang, X.F. (2023). A Review of Additive Manufacturing Techniques and Post-Processing for High-Temperature Titanium Alloys. Metals, 13. 3. Microstructural Heterogeneity and Anisotropy Control of Additive Manufactured Ti-6Al-4V Alloy for Aircraft Components;Kumar;JOM,2023 4. Additive manufacturing of titanium-based alloys—A review of methods, properties, challenges, and prospects;Tshephe;Heliyon,2022 5. Li, H., Chen, S.F., Zhang, S.H., Xu, Y., and Song, H.W. (2022). Deformation Characteristics, Formability and Springback Control of Titanium Alloy Sheet at Room Temperature: A Review. Materials, 15.
|
|