Abstract

This paper investigated the cooperative effects of Li addition and warm Equal Channel Angular Pressing (ECAP) on improving the mechanical properties of an Al-Mg-Li alloy for further weight reduction. The results showed that more Li addition could obviously refine the grains of the as-cast alloy and reduce its density value to only 2.37 g/cm3 when Li content reached 2.5% (about 12.6% lighter than commercial Al alloys). It also had a pronounced influence on the precipitations in the Al-5.5Mg-xLi-0.1Zr alloy, i.e., the number density and size of Al2MgLi and δ’-Al3Li phases. The yield strength of the as-cast alloy was increased with increasing Li, but the elongation deteriorated due to primary network intergranular Al2MgLi and more δ’ particles in the high Li-containing alloy. The warm multi-pass ECAP process was found to simultaneously improve the strength and ductility of the Al-Mg-Li alloys, and greatly alleviate the detrimental effect of Li addition on the elongation, thereby making the ultrafine-grained (UFG) alloys, a good combination of lightweight and high performance, very attractive for aerospace applications for much higher specific strength than both Al matrix composites and Mg alloys.

Highlights

  • Since weight reduction has been considered as a more and more important contributor to performance and operating cost associated with fuel efficiency, the strength/weight ratio has become the prime driver for designers to select materials for aerospace systems [1]

  • It is well known that Al-Mg-Li alloys, as one of the industrially used categories of Al-Li alloys, have the lowest densities available for a commercial aluminum alloy

  • For the ECAPed alloys, the effect of Li addition on the microstructure of Al-Mg-Li alloys is greatly weakened by severe plastic deformation

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Summary

Introduction

Since weight reduction has been considered as a more and more important contributor to performance and operating cost associated with fuel efficiency, the strength/weight ratio has become the prime driver for designers to select materials for aerospace systems [1]. Under such circumstances, aluminum-lithium alloys, with lower density, higher strength, and better stiffness than conventional aluminum alloys, are considered as promising structure materials to reduce cost in the aerospace industry [2,3]. High Mg contents (>4 wt%) tend to favor the formation of the equilibrium cubic phase

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