Abstract

Aiming at overcoming the strength-ductility trade-off in structural Ti-alloys, a new family of TRIP/TWIP Ti-alloys was developed in the past decade (TWIP: twinning-induced plasticity; TRIP: transformation-induced plasticity). Herein, we study the tunable nature of deformation mechanisms with various TWIP and TRIP contributions by fine adjustment of the Zr content on ternary Ti-12Mo-xZr (x = 3, 6, 10) alloys. The microstructure and deformation mechanisms of the Ti-Mo-Zr alloys are explored by using in-situ electron backscatter diffraction (EBSD) and transmission electron microscopy (TEM). The results show that a transition of the dominant deformation mode occurred, going from TRIP to TWIP major mechanism with increasing Zr content. In the Ti-12Mo-3Zr alloy, the stress-induced martensitic transformation (SIM) is the major deformation mode which accommodates the plastic flow. Regarding the Ti-12Mo-6Zr alloy, the combined deformation twinning (DT) and SIM modes both contribute to the overall plasticity with enhanced strain-hardening rate and subsequent large uniform ductility. Further increase of the Zr content in Ti-12Mo-10Zr alloy leads to an improved yield stress involving single DT mode as a dominant deformation mechanism throughout the plastic regime. In the present work, a set of comprehensive in-situ and ex-situ microstructural investigations clarify the evolution of deformation microstructures during tensile loading and unloading processes.

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