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Co-, Ni- and Fe-rich grain-boundary phases enhance creep resistance in θ′-strengthened Al-Cu alloys.

Authors :
Rakhmonov, J.U.
Qi, J.
Bahl, S.
Dunand, D.C.
Shyam, A.
Source :
Materials Science & Engineering: A. Oct2024, Vol. 912, pN.PAG-N.PAG. 1p.
Publication Year :
2024

Abstract

Microstructural evolution and creep response were investigated in the cast Al-5.0Cu-0.3Mn-0.2Zr (wt.%) alloy with and without addition of slow-diffusing, intermetallic-forming elements Fe, Ni, or Co. Baseline Al-5.0Cu-0.3Mn-0.2Zr alloy exhibits high creep resistance at 300 °C, up to ∼75 MPa, which is attributed to high-aspect-ratio, intragranular θ′-Al 2 Cu precipitates that effectively suppress dislocation climb. However, θ′-Al 2 Cu precipitate-free zones form along grain boundaries upon heat treatment, whose extent is amplified during subsequent creep. Such weak regions experience dislocation creep, leading to strain localization and acceleration of grain-boundary sliding. Adding Ni and Co, individually or in combination, leads to the formation of grain-boundary precipitates (Al 9 Co 2 , Al 3 Ni 2) which are resistant to coarsening, thus suppressing the formation of θ′-Al 2 Cu precipitate-free zones. This microstructure provides high creep resistance at stresses up to 75–80 MPa, with strain rates much lower than in unmodified Al-5.0Cu-0.3Mn-0.2Zr. Adding Fe, which results in extensive decoration of grain boundaries with coarsening-resistant Al 7 Cu 2 Fe, and then increasing the Cu content to compensate for the Cu loss to this new phase, leads to a new Al-7.4Cu-1.6Fe-0.3Mn-0.2Zr alloy with creep resistance at 300 °C that surpasses known cast aluminum alloys. Adding Fe to improve the creep resistance of Al-Cu alloys is both cost-effective and sustainable. Our findings offer guidelines applicable to various alloy systems on controlling the evolution of precipitate-free zones and its ensuing effects on creep deformation. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
09215093
Volume :
912
Database :
Academic Search Index
Journal :
Materials Science & Engineering: A
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
179371826
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1016/j.msea.2024.147052