Microstructural evolution in pure aluminum in the early stages of processing by high-pressure torsion

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Abstract

Measurements were taken to evaluate the evolution of homogeneity in disks of high-purity aluminum in the early stages of processing by high-pressure torsion. The results demonstrate that samples processed through 1/4 or more whole revolutions exhibit microhardness values which are generally higher in the centers of the disks than at the edges whereas after 1/8 turn the hardness is higher at the edge than in the center. It is shown that all of the hardness measurements are mutually consistent and they scatter around a unique curve when plotted against the equivalent strain. The measurements of hardness are supplemented by microstructural observations which provide evidence of a gradual evolution in the microstructure with increasing strain from an initial formation of subgrains to an array of ultrafine grains separated by boundaries having high angles of misorientation. © 2010 The Japan Institute of Metals.

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Xu, C., Horita, Z., & Langdon, T. G. (2010). Microstructural evolution in pure aluminum in the early stages of processing by high-pressure torsion. Materials Transactions, 51(1), 2–7. https://doi.org/10.2320/matertrans.MB200910

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