Abstract

Strongly textured commercially pure titanium alloy TA2 plates with different initial textures have been rolled at cryogenic and ambient temperatures to 4% reduction and then post-annealed at 50 °C for 12 h. Microstructures of the samples were investigated using electron backscatter diffraction. The mechanical property of the sheets was tested via quasi-static uniaxial tensile tests along the rolling direction at room temperature. The effects of initial texture and rolling temperature on twin activity and mechanical property have been investigated. Twinning is very active in TA2 titanium during rolling at either room or cryogenic temperature. $$\{ 11\overline{2} 2\}$$ contraction twins can be observed in all the sheets and are the dominant twin mode for the sheets with an initial texture having c-axes parallel to the normal direction (ND). Extension twins have rarely been seen in sheets having an initial texture with c-axes parallel to ND, but play quite an important role in the sheets having an initial texture with c-axes perpendicular to ND. The initial texture of the sheet is considered to determine the twin mode while the cryogenic rolling temperature is found to increase the numbers of twins. Post-annealing does not change obviously the rolled microstructure. After annealing, the strength decreases and elongation to fracture slightly increases. The cryorolled sample has the better strength with little loss in elongation, and this mechanical enhancement is attributed to massive twinning.

Full Text
Published version (Free)

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call