Saturation of grain fragmentation upon severe plastic Deformation: Fact or fiction?

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Saturation of grain fragmentation upon severe plastic Deformation: Fact or fiction? / Renk, Oliver; Hohenwarter, Anton; Edalati, Kaveh et al.
in: Advanced engineering materials, Jahrgang 26.2024, Nr. 19, 14.06.2024.

Publikationen: Beitrag in FachzeitschriftArtikelForschung(peer-reviewed)

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@article{68a16030c8734a4cba7ef35462203291,
title = "Saturation of grain fragmentation upon severe plastic Deformation: Fact or fiction?",
abstract = "There has been general agreement that grain refinement upon severe plastic deformation (SPD) saturates at equivalent strains of 10–20, as a dynamic equilibrium between refinement and coarsening is established. Meanwhile, few reports question such steady state, but suggest another strain hardening regime might be entered for strains >1000. So far, neither an in-depth analysis nor a general theory for such ultra-SPD strain hardening has been established. The present work provides clear evidence for additional strain hardening at ultra-severe strains. Although at this stage the strain hardening rate is awfully weak (≈0.03 MPa), it manifests in noticeable grain refinement and hardness increase. Texture and the existence of subgrains still support dislocation-based plasticity. Specimens deformed to ultra-severe strains possess improved thermal stability. Although an unambiguous conclusion regarding the origin of the ultra-SPD strain hardening is currently not possible, the potential mechanisms are being discussed. While continuous impurity uptake from the anvils could explain the hardening and improved thermal stability, estimation of grain boundary migration rates suggests that a slight but continuous net refinement is also plausible. Together with structural transformations of grain boundaries, this offers an alternative, intrinsic source for ultra-SPD hardening. It is hoped that this thought-provoking conclusion stimulates further research into this subject.",
author = "Oliver Renk and Anton Hohenwarter and Kaveh Edalati and Kapp, {Marlene W.}",
year = "2024",
month = jun,
day = "14",
doi = "10.1002/adem.202400578",
language = "English",
volume = "26.2024",
journal = " Advanced engineering materials",
issn = "1527-2648",
publisher = "Wiley-VCH ",
number = "19",

}

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TY - JOUR

T1 - Saturation of grain fragmentation upon severe plastic Deformation: Fact or fiction?

AU - Renk, Oliver

AU - Hohenwarter, Anton

AU - Edalati, Kaveh

AU - Kapp, Marlene W.

PY - 2024/6/14

Y1 - 2024/6/14

N2 - There has been general agreement that grain refinement upon severe plastic deformation (SPD) saturates at equivalent strains of 10–20, as a dynamic equilibrium between refinement and coarsening is established. Meanwhile, few reports question such steady state, but suggest another strain hardening regime might be entered for strains >1000. So far, neither an in-depth analysis nor a general theory for such ultra-SPD strain hardening has been established. The present work provides clear evidence for additional strain hardening at ultra-severe strains. Although at this stage the strain hardening rate is awfully weak (≈0.03 MPa), it manifests in noticeable grain refinement and hardness increase. Texture and the existence of subgrains still support dislocation-based plasticity. Specimens deformed to ultra-severe strains possess improved thermal stability. Although an unambiguous conclusion regarding the origin of the ultra-SPD strain hardening is currently not possible, the potential mechanisms are being discussed. While continuous impurity uptake from the anvils could explain the hardening and improved thermal stability, estimation of grain boundary migration rates suggests that a slight but continuous net refinement is also plausible. Together with structural transformations of grain boundaries, this offers an alternative, intrinsic source for ultra-SPD hardening. It is hoped that this thought-provoking conclusion stimulates further research into this subject.

AB - There has been general agreement that grain refinement upon severe plastic deformation (SPD) saturates at equivalent strains of 10–20, as a dynamic equilibrium between refinement and coarsening is established. Meanwhile, few reports question such steady state, but suggest another strain hardening regime might be entered for strains >1000. So far, neither an in-depth analysis nor a general theory for such ultra-SPD strain hardening has been established. The present work provides clear evidence for additional strain hardening at ultra-severe strains. Although at this stage the strain hardening rate is awfully weak (≈0.03 MPa), it manifests in noticeable grain refinement and hardness increase. Texture and the existence of subgrains still support dislocation-based plasticity. Specimens deformed to ultra-severe strains possess improved thermal stability. Although an unambiguous conclusion regarding the origin of the ultra-SPD strain hardening is currently not possible, the potential mechanisms are being discussed. While continuous impurity uptake from the anvils could explain the hardening and improved thermal stability, estimation of grain boundary migration rates suggests that a slight but continuous net refinement is also plausible. Together with structural transformations of grain boundaries, this offers an alternative, intrinsic source for ultra-SPD hardening. It is hoped that this thought-provoking conclusion stimulates further research into this subject.

U2 - 10.1002/adem.202400578

DO - 10.1002/adem.202400578

M3 - Article

VL - 26.2024

JO - Advanced engineering materials

JF - Advanced engineering materials

SN - 1527-2648

IS - 19

ER -