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The nature of the maximum microhardness and thickness of the gradient layer in surface-strengthened Cu-Al alloys

The nature of the maximum microhardness and thickness of the gradient layer in surface-strengthened Cu-Al alloys
The nature of the maximum microhardness and thickness of the gradient layer in surface-strengthened Cu-Al alloys

The presence of a gradient layer with an increased maximum microhardness and extended thickness is extremely attractive because it can enhance the service performances for surface-strengthened metallic materials. In this research, Cu-Al alloys with different Al contents and microstructures were processed by surface spinning strengthening (3S) and studies were conducted to examine the gradient microstructure and microhardness distributions of the 3S Cu-Al alloys. The experimental results show that each group of the 3S Cu-Al alloys having the same Al content has approximately the same maximum microhardness at the topmost surface layer and the maximum microhardness increases with an increase in the Al content. In addition, the thickness of the gradient layer in the 3S Cu-Al alloys increases with a decrease of yield strength and an increase in the work-hardening exponent, respectively. The relationship between the maximum microhardness and chemical composition which determines the Young's modulus and plastic deformation mode, and the relationship between the thickness of the gradient layer and the microstructure which governs the strength and work-hardening capacity, were both investigated. It is found that the maximum microhardness of the gradient layer depends mainly on the chemical composition; whereas the thickness of the gradient layer depends primarily on both the strength and work-hardening capacity which are closely related to the microstructure. By combining the compositional design and microstructure optimization of the materials, and improving the surface strengthening intensity, a gradient layer of the surface-strengthened materials with an enhanced maximum microhardness and an extended thickness may be achieved.

Cu-Al alloy, Gradient layer, Microhardness, Microstructure, Surface spinning strengthening;, Yield strength
1359-6454
Ren, C X
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Wang, Q
161ca6d7-4f88-4a1f-a865-e6a20f250b08
Hou, J P
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Zhang, Z J
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Zhang, Z F
dbbe4276-c9d7-407d-bb78-ea7d9aab084a
Langdon, Terence G
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Ren, C X
cd3dc856-f93e-4629-9437-81bd3cc581ba
Wang, Q
161ca6d7-4f88-4a1f-a865-e6a20f250b08
Hou, J P
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Zhang, Z J
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Zhang, Z F
dbbe4276-c9d7-407d-bb78-ea7d9aab084a
Langdon, Terence G
86e69b4f-e16d-4830-bf8a-5a9c11f0de86

Ren, C X, Wang, Q, Hou, J P, Zhang, Z J, Zhang, Z F and Langdon, Terence G (2021) The nature of the maximum microhardness and thickness of the gradient layer in surface-strengthened Cu-Al alloys. Acta Materialia, 215, [117073]. (doi:10.1016/j.actamat.2021.117073).

Record type: Article

Abstract

The presence of a gradient layer with an increased maximum microhardness and extended thickness is extremely attractive because it can enhance the service performances for surface-strengthened metallic materials. In this research, Cu-Al alloys with different Al contents and microstructures were processed by surface spinning strengthening (3S) and studies were conducted to examine the gradient microstructure and microhardness distributions of the 3S Cu-Al alloys. The experimental results show that each group of the 3S Cu-Al alloys having the same Al content has approximately the same maximum microhardness at the topmost surface layer and the maximum microhardness increases with an increase in the Al content. In addition, the thickness of the gradient layer in the 3S Cu-Al alloys increases with a decrease of yield strength and an increase in the work-hardening exponent, respectively. The relationship between the maximum microhardness and chemical composition which determines the Young's modulus and plastic deformation mode, and the relationship between the thickness of the gradient layer and the microstructure which governs the strength and work-hardening capacity, were both investigated. It is found that the maximum microhardness of the gradient layer depends mainly on the chemical composition; whereas the thickness of the gradient layer depends primarily on both the strength and work-hardening capacity which are closely related to the microstructure. By combining the compositional design and microstructure optimization of the materials, and improving the surface strengthening intensity, a gradient layer of the surface-strengthened materials with an enhanced maximum microhardness and an extended thickness may be achieved.

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Zhang AM combined - Accepted Manuscript
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Accepted/In Press date: 5 June 2021
e-pub ahead of print date: 11 June 2021
Published date: 15 August 2021
Additional Information: Funding Information: This work was supported by the National Natural Science Foundation of China (NSFC) under grant No. U1664253 , the KC Wong Education Foundation (GJTD-2020–09) and LiaoNing Revitalization Talents Program under grant No. XLYC1808027 . One of the authors was supported by the European Research Council under grant agreement No. 267464-SPDMETALS (TGL). Publisher Copyright: © 2021 Acta Materialia Inc.
Keywords: Cu-Al alloy, Gradient layer, Microhardness, Microstructure, Surface spinning strengthening;, Yield strength

Identifiers

Local EPrints ID: 449883
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/449883
ISSN: 1359-6454
PURE UUID: 774c12c3-668e-406a-bef4-548fb7ae0874
ORCID for Terence G Langdon: ORCID iD orcid.org/0000-0003-3541-9250

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Date deposited: 23 Jun 2021 16:31
Last modified: 17 Mar 2024 06:39

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Contributors

Author: C X Ren
Author: Q Wang
Author: J P Hou
Author: Z J Zhang
Author: Z F Zhang

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