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Macro‐ and Nanomechanical Properties and Strain Rate Sensitivity of Accumulative Roll Bonded and Equal Channel Angular Pressed Ultrafine‐Grained Materials
Author(s) -
Böhner Andreas,
Maier Verena,
Durst Karsten,
Höppel Heinz Werner,
Göken Mathias
Publication year - 2011
Publication title -
advanced engineering materials
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.938
H-Index - 114
eISSN - 1527-2648
pISSN - 1438-1656
DOI - 10.1002/adem.201000270
Subject(s) - materials science , nanoindentation , accumulative roll bonding , strain rate , pressing , ductility (earth science) , severe plastic deformation , composite material , microstructure , deformation (meteorology) , ultimate tensile strength , plasticity , tensile testing , deformation mechanism , strain (injury) , metallurgy , creep , medicine
Several processes of severe plastic deformation are suitable for the production of materials with ultrafine‐grained microstructures which are known to exhibit high strength and often good ductility as well as strain rate sensitive behavior. The most promising ones are equal channel angular pressing (ECAP) for bulk material and accumulative roll bonding (ARB) for the production of sheet material. In order to evaluate the influence of the process on these mechanical properties and the strain rate sensitivity, tensile tests, and nanoindentation tests were performed on material produced up to similar effective plastic strains of ε ARB  = 6.4 and ε ECAP  = 6.3. It could be shown that the macroscopic strength is slightly higher for ARB than for ECAP material and vice versa in nanoindentation. Independent of the testing method, the strain rate sensitivities and activation volumes are similar for both materials. Thus, both processes performed up to similar effective plastic strains lead to comparable improvements in the mechanical properties. Additionally it could be shown, that this comparison allows the identification of the dominant deformation mechanism which is responsible for the observed strain rate sensitivity.

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