Abstract

The cyclic stress-response characteristics of powder-metallurgy-processed high-purity aluminium alloy 2124 discontinuously reinforced with varying volume fractions of silicon carbide particulates were studied over a range of plastic strains. The specimens were cycled using tension/compression loading under total strain control. The composite material, in the heat-treated condition, displayed cyclic hardening at all cyclic strain amplitudes and for different volume fractions of the ceramic reinforcement in the aluminium alloy matrix. The degree of hardening was observed to be greater at the higher cyclic strain amplitudes than at corresponding lower strain amplitudes. Micromechanisms controlling the hardening response during cyclic straining are highlighted and rationale for the observed hardening behaviour is attributed to concurrent and competing influences of an increase in dislocation-dislocation interaction, dislocation multiplication and dislocation-particle interactions, and is a mechanical effect. The kinetics of the cyclic fracture process of the composite alloy is discussed in light of composite microstructural effects, plastic strain amplitude and concomitant response stress.

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