Microstructural analysis of titanium alloys based on high-temperature phase reconstruction

The microstructural evolution of titanium alloys under high-temperature conditions plays a key role in determining their mechanical properties and hot working behavior. This research presents an advanced method for calibrating β phase reconstruction software using in situ testing on Grade 2 titanium...

Ausführliche Beschreibung

Gespeichert in:
Bibliographische Detailangaben
Veröffentlicht in:Journal of materials science 2024-10, Vol.59 (40), p.18901-18915
Hauptverfasser: Lypchanskyi, Oleksandr, Muszka, Krzysztof, Wynne, Bradley, Kawalko, Jakub, Śleboda, Tomasz
Format: Artikel
Sprache:eng
Schlagworte:
Online-Zugang:Volltext
Tags: Tag hinzufügen
Keine Tags, Fügen Sie den ersten Tag hinzu!
Beschreibung
Zusammenfassung:The microstructural evolution of titanium alloys under high-temperature conditions plays a key role in determining their mechanical properties and hot working behavior. This research presents an advanced method for calibrating β phase reconstruction software using in situ testing on Grade 2 titanium, which achieves accurate reconstruction of the parent β phase microstructure. In addition, unique microstructural observations in the forging of Ti-6246 titanium alloy are highlighted, demonstrating the influence of deformation parameters on the resulting β phase grain structures. Using advanced techniques such as electron backscatter diffraction and Burgers orientation relationship-based software, the research elucidates the behavior of these phases under varying thermal and deformation conditions. In Grade 2 titanium, significant grain growth and phase transformation dynamics were observed upon heating beyond the β-transus temperature during in situ calibration of β phase reconstruction software. The analysis demonstrates the effectiveness of the software in precise reconstructing the parent β phase microstructure based on the orientation of the inherited α s phase. Furthermore, the evaluation of hot forming parameters in Ti-6246 alloy shows the influence of deformation temperature and strain rate on the resulting microstructure. Finite element method analysis coupled with dynamic material modeling elucidates the distribution of temperature, strain rate, and effective strain during forging, which aids in the qualitative assessment of hot workability. Microstructural observations in Ti-6246 alloy forging highlight the presence of elongated colonies of α s phase precipitates, indicative of localized strain intensities and deformation temperatures. In addition, EBSD analysis coupled with β phase reconstruction reveals distinct microstructural features in different regions of the forging. In particular, regions subjected to higher strain rates exhibit elongated β phase grains with pronounced disorientation gradients, suggesting intense deformation. Conversely, optimal forging conditions lead to the appearance of unreinforced axisymmetric β phase grains, indicating dynamic recovery processes. Pole figure analysis further emphasizes the Burgers crystallographic relationship between the α s and β phases, confirming that deformation during forging occurs exclusively within the β phase. These results provide valuable insights into the microstructural evolution in tita
ISSN:0022-2461
1573-4803
DOI:10.1007/s10853-024-09963-0