Strengthening mechanisms in NiAl bronze: Hot deformation by rolling and friction-stir processing

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Abstract

Microstructures produced by isothermal hot rolling of a NiAl bronze material were evaluated by quantitative microscopy methods and parameters describing the contributions of precipitate dispersions, grain size, solute content, and dislocation density to the yield strengths of the individual constituents of microstructure were determined. Models for the strengths of the individual constituents were combined to predict the temperature dependence of the yield strength as a function of hot rolling temperature, and the prediction was found to be in good agreement with measured yield strengths. The models were applied to microstructures in a stir zone produced by multipass friction-stir processing (FSP) and, again, found to predict measured yield strengths with high accuracy. Such models may aid in assessing the role of microstructure gradients produced during FSP and other processes. © 2012 The Minerals, Metals & Materials Society and ASM International.

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Menon, S. K., Pierce, F. A., Rosemark, B. P., Oh-Ishi, K., Swaminathan, S., & McNelley, T. R. (2012). Strengthening mechanisms in NiAl bronze: Hot deformation by rolling and friction-stir processing. Metallurgical and Materials Transactions A: Physical Metallurgy and Materials Science, 43(10), 3687–3702. https://doi.org/10.1007/s11661-012-1181-x

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