Abstract

Nanocrystalline and near-nano-grained metals are plagued with an overall lack of ductility and formability. This is in part due to their inability to support the dislocation mechanisms or undergo the same types of transformations that conventional coarse-grained metals access inorder to increase their workability. Therefore, despite their advanced properties such as high strength, the manufacturing of such fine-grained metals, which exposes them to multi-axial states of stress in operations such as rolling, drawing, extrusion, forging, and bending, has not been possible. In this work, we address this limitation and highlight an important aspect of geometric dynamic recrystallization (GDRX) in nanocrystalline materials as a way to improve manufacturability. In particular, using two different alloy compositions and two different processing techniques, this study points to the fact that if nanocrystalline or near nano metals can be truly stabilized, they can repeatedly undergo the same types of processes that conventional coarse-grained metals endure, increasing both their formability and hence manufacturability. The results reveal that due to a large number of initial high-angle grain boundaries and large applied compressive strains, GDRX is activated in the absence of any discontinuous dynamic recrystallization (DDRX) or continuous dynamic recrystallization (CDRX). This is a unique aspect of stabilized nanocrystalline materials, as traditionally fine-grained metals are not microstructurally stable enough to accommodate such an event.

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