3D microstructural evolution of primary recrystallization and grain growth in cold rolled single-phase aluminum alloys

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Abstract

Modeling the microstructural evolution during recrystallization is a powerful tool for the profound understanding of alloy behavior and for use in optimizing engineering properties through annealing. In particular, the mechanical properties of metallic alloys are highly dependent upon evolved microstructure and texture from the softening process. In the present work, a Monte Carlo (MC) Potts model was used to model the primary recrystallization and grain growth in cold rolled single-phase Al alloy. The microstructural representation of two kinds of dislocation densities, statistically stored dislocations and geometrically necessary dislocations were quantified based on the ViscoPlastic Fast Fourier transform method. This representation was then introduced into the MC Potts model to identify the favorable sites for nucleation where orientation gradients and entanglements of dislocations are high. Additionally, in situ observations of non-isothermal microstructure evolution for single-phase aluminum alloy 1100 were made to validate the simulation. The influence of the texture inhomogeneity is analyzed from a theoretical point of view using an orientation distribution function for deformed and evolved texture.

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Adam, K., Zöllner, D., & Field, D. P. (2018). 3D microstructural evolution of primary recrystallization and grain growth in cold rolled single-phase aluminum alloys. Modelling and Simulation in Materials Science and Engineering, 26(3). https://doi.org/10.1088/1361-651X/aaa146

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