Abstract
Samples of grade 2 Ti were processed by Equal Channel Angular Pressing (ECAP), either isolated or followed by further deformation by rolling at room temperature and at 170 K. The main interest of the present work was the evaluation of the effect of cryogenic rolling on tensile strength, fatigue limit and Charpy impact absorbed energy. Results show a progressive improvement of strength and endurance limit in the following order: ECAP; ECAP followed by room temperature rolling and ECAP followed by cryogenic rolling. From the examination of the fatigued samples a ductile fracture mode was inferred in all cases; also, the sample processed by cryogenic rolling showed very small and shallow dimples and a small fracture zone, confirming the agency of strength on the fatigue behaviour. The Charpy impact energy followed a similar pattern, with the exception that ECAP produced only a small improvement over the coarse-grained material. Motives for the efficiency of cryogenic deformation by rolling are the reduced grain size and the association of strength and ductility. The production of favourable deformation textures must also be considered. © Published under licence by IOP Publishing Ltd.
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CITATION STYLE
Mendes, A., Kliauga, A. M., Ferrante, M., & Sordi, V. L. (2014). How severe plastic deformation at cryogenic temperature affects strength, fatigue, and impact behaviour of grade 2 titanium. In IOP Conference Series: Materials Science and Engineering (Vol. 63). Institute of Physics Publishing. https://doi.org/10.1088/1757-899X/63/1/012161
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