Abstract
The improvement of tensile strength at elevated temperatures in light metallic alloys often compromises room temperature (RT) ductility. In this study, we focus on Mg-RE alloys to demonstrate a strategy for simultaneously achieving excellent high-temperature strength and decent RT ductility. This is accomplished by integrating a heterogeneous lamella-structure with dispersed nano-spaced stacking faults. Specifically, the small deformation but multipass hot-rolled Mg-8.5Gd-3Y-2Cu-0.5Zr (wt.%) alloys exhibit a distinctive heterogeneous lamella-structure. This structure features coarse grains interspersed with fine-grained layers and plate-shaped long-period stacking ordered (LPSO) precipitates. Such a microstructure grants the alloy a yield strength of 228 MPa at 300 °C, RT ultimate tensile strength of 538 MPa, and RT elongation of 12.2 %. The good combination of ultra-high strength and substantial ductility at RT is primarily due to the hetero-deformation induced back stress and significant activation of <c+a> dislocations. In addition, the dislocation cellular walls developed during the multipass hot-rolling process, can encourage mechanisms such as twinning and stacking faults formation. The excellent strength at high temperatures is as a result of the thermally stable LPSO particles which hinder grain-coarsening in the fine-grained layers.
| Original language | English |
|---|---|
| Article number | 148466 |
| Journal | Materials Science and Engineering: A |
| Volume | 937 |
| DOIs | |
| State | Published - Aug 2025 |
Keywords
- Heterogeneous structure
- High-temperature strength
- LPSO phase
- Mg-RE alloys