TY - JOUR
T1 - Solid solution hardening in supersaturated AlMgSi alloy
AU - Takata, Ken
AU - Ushioda, Kohsaku
AU - Kaneko, Kenji
AU - Akiyoshi, Ryutaro
AU - Ikeda, Ken ichi
AU - Hata, Satoshi
AU - Nakashima, Hideharu
N1 - Publisher Copyright:
©2019 The Japan Institute of Metals and Materials
PY - 2019
Y1 - 2019
N2 - The yield strength and work hardening of AlMgSi alloys are related to the concentration of solute atoms. This study was carried out to clarify the effect of two kinds of solute atoms on these properties in terms of a linear combination of contributions from a solid solution. Tensile tests were conducted with Al and with Al0.62Mg0.32Si, Al0.65Mg0.81Si, Al2.4Mg, and Al4.4Mg (mass%) alloys in solid solution. Work hardening was analyzed using the KocksMecking model, yielding two parameters which indicate the storage and recovery of dislocations in the material. The yield strength could not be expressed as a linear combination of solute atom concentrations, but the amount of dislocation storage and dynamic recovery could be expressed as such linear combinations. In the high-strain region, the KocksMecking model no longer applies, and the maximum stress at which the model failed increased with increasing concentrations of solute atoms. It is generally known that an interaction between strain fields around solute atoms and quenched-in vacancies can affect the yield strength owing to dislocation motion and that these atoms can retard the development of microstructures in high-strain regions. A linear combination of contributions from solid solutions is possible only for the storage and recovery of dislocations in the low-strain region.
AB - The yield strength and work hardening of AlMgSi alloys are related to the concentration of solute atoms. This study was carried out to clarify the effect of two kinds of solute atoms on these properties in terms of a linear combination of contributions from a solid solution. Tensile tests were conducted with Al and with Al0.62Mg0.32Si, Al0.65Mg0.81Si, Al2.4Mg, and Al4.4Mg (mass%) alloys in solid solution. Work hardening was analyzed using the KocksMecking model, yielding two parameters which indicate the storage and recovery of dislocations in the material. The yield strength could not be expressed as a linear combination of solute atom concentrations, but the amount of dislocation storage and dynamic recovery could be expressed as such linear combinations. In the high-strain region, the KocksMecking model no longer applies, and the maximum stress at which the model failed increased with increasing concentrations of solute atoms. It is generally known that an interaction between strain fields around solute atoms and quenched-in vacancies can affect the yield strength owing to dislocation motion and that these atoms can retard the development of microstructures in high-strain regions. A linear combination of contributions from solid solutions is possible only for the storage and recovery of dislocations in the low-strain region.
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U2 - 10.2320/matertrans.MT-M2019190
DO - 10.2320/matertrans.MT-M2019190
M3 - Article
AN - SCOPUS:85075640635
SN - 1345-9678
VL - 60
SP - 2525
EP - 2529
JO - Materials Transactions
JF - Materials Transactions
IS - 12
ER -