Microstructures of tribologically modified surface layers in two-phase alloys

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Abstract

When ductile alloys are subject to sliding wear, small increments of plastic strain accumulate into severe plastic deformation and mechanical alloying of the surface layer. The authors constructed a simple coaxial tribometer, which was used to study this phenomenon in wrought Al-Sn and cast Cu-Mg-Sn alloys. The first class of materials is ductile and consists of two immiscible phases. Tribological modification is observed in the form of a transition zone from virgin material to severely deformed grains. At the surface, mechanical mixing of both phases competes with diffusional unmixing. Vortex flow patterns are typically observed. The experimental Cu-Mg-Sn alloys are ductile for Mg-contents up to 2 wt% and consist of a- dendrites with a eutectic consisting of a brittle Cu2Mg-matrix with α-particles. In these, the observations are similar to the Al-Sn Alloys. Alloys with 5 wt% Mg are brittle due to the contiguity of the eutectic compound. Nonetheless, under sliding contact, this compound behaves in a ductile manner, showing mechanical mixing of a and Cu2Mg in the top layers and a remarkable transition from a eutectic to cellular microstructure just below, due to severe shear deformation. AFM-observations allow identifying the mechanically homogenized surface layers as a nanocrystalline material with a cell structure associated to the sliding direction. © Published under licence by IOP Publishing Ltd.

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Figueroa, C. G., Ortega, I., Jacobo, V. H., Ortiz, A., Bravo, A. E., & Schouwenaars, R. (2014). Microstructures of tribologically modified surface layers in two-phase alloys. In IOP Conference Series: Materials Science and Engineering (Vol. 63). Institute of Physics Publishing. https://doi.org/10.1088/1757-899X/63/1/012018

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