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Effect of microstructural morphology on the mechanical properties of titanium alloys

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conference contribution
posted on 2024-11-15, 13:30 authored by Ali Dehghan-Manshadi, Mark Reid, Rian DippenaarRian Dippenaar
Different morphologies of α+β microstructures were obtained in a commercial Ti-6Al-4V alloy by cooling at different rates from the single β-phase region into the two phase region. The effect of such morphologies on mechanical properties was studied using hot compression tests in a Gleeble thermomechanical simulator. A variety of complex morphologies could be obtained since the cooling rate has a significant influence on the β to α phase transformation and the resulting morphological development. While most of the β phase transformed to colonies of α at high cooling rates, it was possible to obtain a complex mixture of a colonies, grain boundary a and lamellar structure by decreasing the cooling rate. These complex morphologies each exhibited distinctive mechanical properties and characteristic dynamic phase transformation behaviour during deformation as a function of strain rate.

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Citation

Dehghan-Manshadi, A., Reid, M. H. & Dippenaar, R. J. (2010). Effect of microstructural morphology on the mechanical properties of titanium alloys. In 15th International Conference on the Strength of Materials (ICSMA-15), 16-21 Aug, 2009, Dresden, Germany. Journal of Physics: Conference Series, 240 (1), 012022-1-012022-4.

Parent title

Journal of Physics: Conference Series

Volume

240

Language

English

RIS ID

32540

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