Abstract

In several precipitation hardened alloys that are susceptible to intergranular ductile failure, precipitation does not always occur uniformly throughout the microstructure, and regions close to grain boundaries may remain precipitate-free. These precipitate-free zones (PFZs) in the material microstructures result in plastically heterogeneous grains, since PFZs are expected to have lower yield strength but higher strain-hardenability compared to the precipitate containing grain interior. Experimentally, the presence of PFZs in precipitation-hardened alloys has been associated with both increase and decrease in materials’ ductility, with or without significant change in the strength. Thus, to understand and rationalize the experimental observations, we have carried out extensive microstructure-based finite element calculations of intergranular ductile failure in materials under tensile loading conditions. In the calculations, both the grain boundaries and PFZs are discretely modeled, and a wide range of the values of yield strength, strain-hardenability and width of PFZs in the material microstructures are analyzed. Our results show that the effects of PFZs on the overall mechanical response of the material strongly depend on the values of yield strength and strain-hardenability of PFZs. Furthermore, there exists an optimum combination of the values of these two parameters that can result in the overall ductility and tensile strength of the material microstructures with PFZs being greater than the microstructures without PFZs.

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