Changes of microstructures and mechanical properties in commercially pure titanium after different cycles of proposed multi-directional forging

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Abstract

A newly proposed multi-directional forging (MDF) was successfully applied to a commercially pure titanium (CP Ti). Severe plastic deformation would result in significant and complex changes of microstructure and mechanical properties, so microstructure characterization and a mechanical test of CP Ti were conducted after different cycles of MDF. The results demonstrated that dynamic recrystallization was the dominant grain refinement mechanism of MDF CP Ti. With increasing the cycles of MDF, grain size, fraction of low angle grain boundaries and dislocations density decreased due to grain refined. After three cycles of MDF, the mean grain size was about 200 nm. The values of tensile strength and hardness increased significantly from zero cycles to one cycle of MDF, but increased slowly after one MDF cycle. Numerous dimples and tear ridges were present, but the dimples were smaller and shallower with increasing cycles of MDF.

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Zheng, Z., Zhang, X., Xie, L., Huang, L., & Sun, T. (2019). Changes of microstructures and mechanical properties in commercially pure titanium after different cycles of proposed multi-directional forging. Metals, 9(2). https://doi.org/10.3390/met9020175

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