Abstract

To gain insight into accommodation mechanisms for local stress concentrations produced by grain boundary sliding (GBS), we systematically examined texture evolution within a superplastic magnesium alloy undergoing deformation at a relatively low deformation temperature (at which basal slip is known to be the preferred slip system in magnesium). Although we did observe an overall weakening of the initial basal texture during superplastic deformation, we also observed within the interior of the specimen a convergent evolution that depends on loading direction. We attribute this texture evolution within the bulk to the competing effects of (a) orientation divergence due to grain rotation accompanied by GBS and (b) convergent evolution due to slip, which acts primarily as an accommodation mechanism for GBS. In contrast, at the near-surface, we found the initial orientation to be preserved, indicating that slip accommodation is less important near the surface than within the bulk.

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