TY - JOUR
T1 - Stress-induced α″ martensitic phase transformation and martensitic twinning in a metastable β titanium alloy
AU - Chen, Nana
AU - Kou, Hongchao
AU - Wu, Zhihong
AU - Qiang, Fengming
AU - Wang, Chuanyun
AU - Li, Jinshan
AU - Molina-Aldareguia, J. M.
N1 - Publisher Copyright:
© 2020 Elsevier B.V.
PY - 2021/4/5
Y1 - 2021/4/5
N2 - The stress-induced martensitic (SIM) β→α″ phase transformation and SIM α″ twinning in the fully-β Ti–7Mo–3Nb–3Cr–3Al (Ti-7333) alloy was investigated as a function of strain, following a surface-to-bulk methodology assisted by electron backscatter diffraction (EBSD), focused ion beam (FIB) milling and transmission electron microscopy (TEM). The results indicate that the Ti-7333 alloy is predominantly deformed by SIM and SIM α″ twinning. At the onset of deformation, the lattice correspondent SIM α″ martensite variant that produces the maximum transformation strain along the tensile direction is activated firstly, which follows the <-110>β//<001>α″ orientation relationship. As the strain increases, the SIM α″ laths deform by twinning, predominantly through the {130}<310>α″ compound twinning and {111}α″ type Ⅰ twinning modes. Their activation can be rationalized in terms of the magnitude of the shear and the complexity of the atomic shuffle using the Bilby-Crocker deformation twinning theory. The prevalence of {130}<310>α″ compound twinning in this alloy is attributed to the comparatively small shear (0.1872) and the simple shuffle (q = 2, ΔⅠa = 0.3257) mechanism involved. During the last stages of deformation, secondary microtwinning takes place within the primary twins due to the reduced mobility of the intervariant boundaries. The evolution of such hierarchical microstructure with strain accounts for the complex microstructural features that developed with deformation, responsible for the high work hardening displayed by this alloy.
AB - The stress-induced martensitic (SIM) β→α″ phase transformation and SIM α″ twinning in the fully-β Ti–7Mo–3Nb–3Cr–3Al (Ti-7333) alloy was investigated as a function of strain, following a surface-to-bulk methodology assisted by electron backscatter diffraction (EBSD), focused ion beam (FIB) milling and transmission electron microscopy (TEM). The results indicate that the Ti-7333 alloy is predominantly deformed by SIM and SIM α″ twinning. At the onset of deformation, the lattice correspondent SIM α″ martensite variant that produces the maximum transformation strain along the tensile direction is activated firstly, which follows the <-110>β//<001>α″ orientation relationship. As the strain increases, the SIM α″ laths deform by twinning, predominantly through the {130}<310>α″ compound twinning and {111}α″ type Ⅰ twinning modes. Their activation can be rationalized in terms of the magnitude of the shear and the complexity of the atomic shuffle using the Bilby-Crocker deformation twinning theory. The prevalence of {130}<310>α″ compound twinning in this alloy is attributed to the comparatively small shear (0.1872) and the simple shuffle (q = 2, ΔⅠa = 0.3257) mechanism involved. During the last stages of deformation, secondary microtwinning takes place within the primary twins due to the reduced mobility of the intervariant boundaries. The evolution of such hierarchical microstructure with strain accounts for the complex microstructural features that developed with deformation, responsible for the high work hardening displayed by this alloy.
KW - Deformation structure
KW - Martensitic phase transformation
KW - Metastable β titanium alloy
KW - Twinning
KW - Variant selection
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=85096124757&partnerID=8YFLogxK
U2 - 10.1016/j.jallcom.2020.157809
DO - 10.1016/j.jallcom.2020.157809
M3 - 文章
AN - SCOPUS:85096124757
SN - 0925-8388
VL - 859
JO - Journal of Alloys and Compounds
JF - Journal of Alloys and Compounds
M1 - 157809
ER -