In this study, the accumulative roll bonding and folding (ARBF) process was used for manufacturing nanostructured aluminum/copper multilayered composites. Textural evolution during the ARBF process of composites was evaluated using X-ray diffraction. Microstructural observation of some samples was evaluated by scanning electron microscopy and transmission electron microscopy. The ARBF process induced formation of a strong preferred orientation along the β-fiber and also to the pronounced copper texture component. In the aluminum side, occurrence of dynamic recovery reduced the intensity of the β-fiber rolling texture due to change in dislocation structure and decrease in the degree of strain hardening. On the other hand, occurrence of discontinuous dynamic recrystallization at the third and fourth ARBF cycles led to decreasing the intensity of fibers and texture components in the copper side. The average grain sizes of the final sample for the copper and aluminum sides were ~50 and ~200 nm, respectively. 相似文献
Multilayered Ti/Al/Nb composites were produced by the accumulative roll bonding (ARB) process utilizing pure Ti, Al, and Nb element sheets. Up to four cycles of ARB were applied to the composites. The microstructure and texture evolution on the Nb phase were studied by X-ray diffraction (XRD), transmission electron microscopy, scanning electron microscopy, and electron backscattered diffraction. Nb and Ti layers necked and fractured as the number of ARB passes increased. After four ARB cycles, a nearly homogeneous distribution of Nb and Ti layers in Al matrix was achieved. As-received Nb sheet exhibited a fully lamellar structure and had a strong cold-rolling texture. After subjecting to ARB, slight grain refining was observed and the high-angle boundary fraction was increased. The intensity of the α-fiber was weakened, while that of the γ-fiber was strengthened during ARB. The texture evolution was attributed to partial recrystallization during the ARB process as a result of adiabatic heating. 相似文献
Metallurgical and Materials Transactions A - Effect of B4C/SiC particles content on the microstructure, deformation, and electrochemical behavior of aluminum-based hybrid composite processed by... 相似文献
The bond strength in bimetallic materials is an important material characteristic. In this study, 0.1-mm thick bimetallic foils (AA1050/AA6061) were produced using one pass of accumulative roll bonding followed by three passes of asymmetric rolling (AR). The AR passes were carried out at roll speed ratios of 1.0, 1.1, 1.2, 1.3, and 1.4 separately. Finite element simulation was used to model the deformation of the bimetallic foils for the various experimental conditions. Particular attention was focused on the bonding of the interface between AA1050 and AA6061 layers in the simulation. The optimization of the roll speed ratio was obtained for improvement of the bond strength of the interface of AA1050/AA6061 bimetallic foils during AR process. In the simulation, the mean equivalent strain at the interface zone between the AA1050 and AA6061 layers was seen to reach a peak value at a roll speed ratio of about 1.2 to 1.3, which also corresponded to a high quality bond at the interface as observed experimentally. 相似文献
In this paper, sheets of commercial purity Al were fabricated by the accumulative roll-bonding (ARB) method up to six cycles. To increase the shear deformation, no lubricant was used during the ARB processing and the samples were carried out for ARB processing without any preheat treatment. One interesting finding is that the ductility and strength both increased during the first several cycles of ARB processing. It is proposed that the initial rolling texture might play an important part in the subsequent ARB processing since the original Al sheets for ARB processing have not been subjected to any annealing. The microstructures of the specimens after each ARB cycle were investigated by transmission electron microscopy and correlated with the mechanical properties. 相似文献
The AA5005/AA6061 laminated composite has been fabricated by the accumulative roll bonding (ARB) using commercial AA5005 and AA6061. In the ARB process, one piece of AA5005 sheet and one piece of AA6061 sheet were stacked together and rolled with a 50 pct reduction without any lubrication. The materials were heated at 473 K (200 °C) for 10 minutes before each rolling process and were deformed up to four cycles to accumulate an equivalent strain of 3.2 and form an AA5005/AA6061 laminated composite. Mechanical properties and microstructure of the laminated composites were tested. The hardness and tensile strength increased, and the grain size reduced with the number of ARB cycles. Ultrafine grains elongated along the rolling direction were developed during the ARB process. The thicknesses of the grains of both the AA5005 and AA6061 layers were less than 200 nm after the fourth cycle. The uniform elongation decreased drastically after the first cycle ARB and stayed almost unchanged after further ARB process. The hardness of the AA5005 layer was slightly lower than that of the AA6061 layer. The microstructures from optical microscope and transmission microscope showed that in the AA6061 layer large precipitates in the micron scale and small particles less than 100 nm were present, whereas in the AA5005 layer there were large scale precipitates, but no small-sized particles. 相似文献
In this study, 1-mm AA1050/AA5083 bimetallic laminates were produced using roll bonding (RB) process. The RB process was carried out with thickness reduction ratios of 25, 50 and 75%, separately. Finite element simulation was used to model the deformation of bimetallic laminates for various experimental conditions. Particular attention was focused on the bonding of the interface between AA1050 and AA5083 layers in the simulation. The optimization of thickness reduction ratios was obtained for improvement of the bond strength of bimetallic laminates during RB process. During the simulation, the mean equivalent strain at the interface zone between the layers was found to reach the maximum value with a high quality bond for the sample produced with 75% of thickness reduction. Moreover, the fracture surface of samples around the interface of laminates after the tensile test was studied to investigate the bonding quality by scanning electron microscopy. 相似文献
A combination of accumulative roll bonding and rolling is used to fabricate bulk sheets of multilayer Cu-Nb bimetallic composites. Alterations in the processing sequence are made in comparison with prior studies in order to expand the processing window available for bimetallic multilayer composites. Cu-Nb composites with layer thicknesses ranging from 45 μm to 10 nm with accompanying total strains of 3.8 to 12.21 are characterized via neutron diffraction, electron back scatter diffraction, and transmission electron microscopy. These characterization methods provide microstructural information such as layer morphology and grain morphology as well as orientation information such as texture and interface plane normal distribution. The evolution of these microstructural characteristics is collected as a function of increasing strain. These results can provide guidance, inputs, and validation for multiscale predictive models that are being developed on materials with interfacially-driven properties. Finally, synthesis pathways are presented that allow the fabrication of nanoscale multilayer composites with predominant interfacial structures. These fabricated materials are ideal for exploring the relative importance between inter-phase interfacial density and atomic interfacial structure in determining material properties. 相似文献
Multilayered Cu/Al composites with high strength and thermal stability were successfully fabricated by combining accumulative roll bonding (ARB) and cryorolling. The microstructure, tensile properties, and thermal stability of the multilayered Cu/Al composites subjected to cold rolling and cryorolling were analysed. Subsequent cryorolling can be used to modify interfacial flatness and local necking, induce the formation of high-density stacking faults in the Cu matrix, and enhance interfacial bonding strength, which improves the mechanical properties of ARB composites. The initial lamellar structure is gradually transformed into serious mixing with an increase in annealing temperature, accompanied by the formation of excessive Cu–Al intermetallic compounds (IMCs). Cryorolled samples exhibited higher thermal stability than cold-rolled samples. At low annealing temperature, high-density stacking faults induced by cryorolling facilitated the transition from low-angle grain boundaries to high-angle grain boundaries, which led to the formation of ultra-fine grains. For the samples annealed at high temperatures, cryorolling led to the effective inhibition of Cu–Al IMC formation and growth due to the genetic effect of less heat input.