Abstract
Industries operating in extreme conditions demand materials with exceptional strength, fatigue resistance, corrosion resistance, and formability. While AA5052 alloy is widely used in such industries due to its high fatigue strength and corrosion resistance, its strength frequently falls short of stringent standards. For AA5052 alloy, this study explores the combined use of solutionizing and cryo-rolling, followed by annealing, to improve strength. Although several alloys have been reported to undergo solution treatment before cryo-rolling, this study focuses on how post-processing via annealing can lessen the formability constraints usually connected to conventional cryo-rolling. The study sheds light on the ways that solutionizing, cryo-rolling, and annealing interact to affect the alloy’s mechanical characteristics. Microstructure analysis shows that solutionizing improves the grain structure by reducing dynamic recovery, promoting dislocation density, and facilitating precipitate formation. Sheets subjected to solutionizing + cryo-rolling and partially annealed at 250 °C produce optimal results. Interestingly, formability is decreased when cryo-rolling alone is used instead of cold rolling, whereas formability is successfully increased when solutionizing is used. Comparing solutionized + cryo-rolled sheets that are partially annealed at 250 °C to cold-rolled sheets that are annealed at the same temperature, the former show notable quantitative improvements: a notable 17% increase in ultimate strength, a 10% boost in yield strength, and a noteworthy 13% enhancement in microhardness. Formability has improved with the solutionized + cryo-rolled specimens by annealing. This proposed approach led to noticeable gains in formability, hardness, and strength, which would significantly improve material performance for industrial applications.
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