Hardness enhancement of commercially pure aluminium by a typical cyclic heat treatment process involving repeated ice-brine quenching
Erhöhung der Härte von Reinaluminium durch ein typisches zyklisches Wärmebehandlungsverfahren mit wiederholtem Abschrecken in Eis-Sole
IF 1.2 4区 材料科学Q4 MATERIALS SCIENCE, MULTIDISCIPLINARY
J. Maity, A. S. Bansfore, A. Pal, B. Hazra, L. Roy, D. Mahato, A. B. Shav
{"title":"Hardness enhancement of commercially pure aluminium by a typical cyclic heat treatment process involving repeated ice-brine quenching\n Erhöhung der Härte von Reinaluminium durch ein typisches zyklisches Wärmebehandlungsverfahren mit wiederholtem Abschrecken in Eis-Sole","authors":"J. Maity, A. S. Bansfore, A. Pal, B. Hazra, L. Roy, D. Mahato, A. B. Shav","doi":"10.1002/mawe.202400181","DOIUrl":null,"url":null,"abstract":"<p>A typical cyclic heat treatment process has been adopted up to four cycles on initially annealed commercially pure aluminium, primarily containing iron impurity, that involves short-duration (5 minutes) holding at 600 °C followed by ice-brine quenching in each cycle. As a consequence, a significant grain refinement effect and a gradual accumulation of lattice strain during the progress of cyclic heat treatment are observed in relation to an evolution of the regions of extremely low misorientation angle in the aluminium matrix. Apart from quench-in strain, the presence of grain boundary iron aluminide phase, possessing a different coefficient of thermal expansion than that of aluminium matrix, appears to be an additional reason for gradual lattice strain development. In addition, a preferred growth of (202) plane along [101] direction towards the final stage of cyclic heat treatment (four cycles) is also revealed. As a result of gradual lattice strain accumulation and grain refinement effects, the hardness of commercially pure aluminium is found to be considerably enhanced (98 HV 10) after 4 cycles of heat treatment as compared to an initial hardness (36 HV 10) in annealed condition.</p>","PeriodicalId":18366,"journal":{"name":"Materialwissenschaft und Werkstofftechnik","volume":"56 2","pages":"201-211"},"PeriodicalIF":1.2000,"publicationDate":"2025-02-05","publicationTypes":"Journal Article","fieldsOfStudy":null,"isOpenAccess":false,"openAccessPdf":"","citationCount":"0","resultStr":null,"platform":"Semanticscholar","paperid":null,"PeriodicalName":"Materialwissenschaft und Werkstofftechnik","FirstCategoryId":"88","ListUrlMain":"https://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/10.1002/mawe.202400181","RegionNum":4,"RegionCategory":"材料科学","ArticlePicture":[],"TitleCN":null,"AbstractTextCN":null,"PMCID":null,"EPubDate":"","PubModel":"","JCR":"Q4","JCRName":"MATERIALS SCIENCE, MULTIDISCIPLINARY","Score":null,"Total":0}
引用次数: 0
Abstract
A typical cyclic heat treatment process has been adopted up to four cycles on initially annealed commercially pure aluminium, primarily containing iron impurity, that involves short-duration (5 minutes) holding at 600 °C followed by ice-brine quenching in each cycle. As a consequence, a significant grain refinement effect and a gradual accumulation of lattice strain during the progress of cyclic heat treatment are observed in relation to an evolution of the regions of extremely low misorientation angle in the aluminium matrix. Apart from quench-in strain, the presence of grain boundary iron aluminide phase, possessing a different coefficient of thermal expansion than that of aluminium matrix, appears to be an additional reason for gradual lattice strain development. In addition, a preferred growth of (202) plane along [101] direction towards the final stage of cyclic heat treatment (four cycles) is also revealed. As a result of gradual lattice strain accumulation and grain refinement effects, the hardness of commercially pure aluminium is found to be considerably enhanced (98 HV 10) after 4 cycles of heat treatment as compared to an initial hardness (36 HV 10) in annealed condition.
期刊介绍:
Materialwissenschaft und Werkstofftechnik provides fundamental and practical information for those concerned with materials development, manufacture, and testing.
Both technical and economic aspects are taken into consideration in order to facilitate choice of the material that best suits the purpose at hand. Review articles summarize new developments and offer fresh insight into the various aspects of the discipline.
Recent results regarding material selection, use and testing are described in original articles, which also deal with failure treatment and investigation. Abstracts of new publications from other journals as well as lectures presented at meetings and reports about forthcoming events round off the journal.