Abstract

Creep aging is well-known to be a time-dependent, coupled process of deformation and precipitation strengthening for age-hardening alloys. Its existing mechanisms are mainly attributed to those interactions between atomic diffusion and dislocation motion. However, an understanding of the relationship between dislocation density and a special multistage creep behavior, i.e., double steady creep feature, is still far limited. Here we investigate the effect of various dislocation density levels on such an abnormal multistage creep of an Al-Cu-Li alloy. We find that the increased dislocation densities enable an apparent time decrease (from 6.2 h to 0.8 h) of their first steady Ⅱ-stage. The yield strength of post-aged samples increases from 425.0 MPa to 580.0 MPa while the corresponding elongation decreases from 12.3% to 7.3% for the creep-aged samples #1 to #4. Microstructural results also reveal that a great difference in dislocation configuration, tailored by various density levels, results in varying creep processes of the Ⅱ-stage. This stage is closely related to the nucleation and early growth of T1 precipitates. Their number densities (maximum: 2.9 × 1019 m–3) and the average length (maximum: 21.3 nm) of T1 precipitates are much smaller than those of the stable peak-aged T1 phases, suggesting that creep Ⅱ-stage of all three creep-aged samples is dominant by the nucleation and initial growth of those T1 precipitates. This study provides valuable insights into the dislocation density-mediated creep deformation of an Al-Cu-Li alloy.

Full Text
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