Limitation of current hardening models in predicting anisotropy by twinning in hcp metals: Application to a rod-textured AM30 magnesium alloy

  • Oppedal A
  • El Kadiri H
  • Tomé C
  • et al.
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Abstract

When a strongly textured hexagonal close packed (HCP) metal is loaded under an orientation causing profuse twinning or detwinning, the stress-strain curve is sigmoidal in shape and inflects at some threshold. Authors have largely attributed the dramatic stress increase in the lower-bound vicinity of the inflection point to a combined effect of a Hall-Petch mechanism correlated to grain refinement by twinning, and twinning-induced reorientation requiring activation of hard slip modes. We experimentally and numerically demonstrate that these two mechanisms alone are unable to reproduce the stress-strain behaviors obtained under intermediate loading orientations correlated to in-between profuse twinning and nominal twinning. We argue based on adopting various mechanistic approaches in hardening model correlations from the literature. We used both a physics dislocation based model and a phenomenological Voce hardening model. The HCP material is exemplified by an extruded AM30 magnesium alloy with a 〈1010〉-fiber parallel to the extrusion direction.

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Oppedal, A. L., El Kadiri, H., Tomé, C. N., Baird, J. C., Vogel, S. C., & Horstemeyer, M. F. (2011). Limitation of current hardening models in predicting anisotropy by twinning in hcp metals: Application to a rod-textured AM30 magnesium alloy. In Magnesium Technology 2011 (pp. 313–320). Springer International Publishing. https://doi.org/10.1007/978-3-319-48223-1_59

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