Abstract
Uniaxial tension and compression tests have been carried out on two titanium based alloys, Ti–6Al–4V in the form of extruded tubes and forged plates and Ti–3Al–10V–2Fe sheets, to study anisotropic behaviour during superplastic deformation. The following were observed: (i) originally round cross-section became elliptical after deformation; (ii) the flow stresses and strain rates were dependent on the orientation of the specimens; and (iii) the strain anisotropy became less severe as the strain rate increased. These characteristics of anisotropy were related to the original microstructure (e.g. the mechanical fibring of the α grains) and the microstructural evolution during superplastic deformation. New constitutive equations for describing anisotropic superplastic deformation have been proposed to explain the effect of strain rate or stress on anisotropy.
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