Abstract
Various brittle phases are present in commercial cast aluminum alloys, which strongly influence their mechanical behavior. Among these, silicon precipitates are nearly omnipresent, as Si is a common alloying element. In secondary alloys, usually Fe-containing phases cannot be avoided, and they tend to degrade the mechanical properties. The interaction between the silicon phase and the failure-critical intermetallic phase in the Al-Si-Fe phase system (β-Al5FeSi) is studied in this paper in high resolution. A model alloy AlSi10Fe0.7 was defined, which is composed of a large grain Al-matrix, Si-precipitates and the plate-like β-Al5FeSi phase. The goal of the study was to identify “hot spots” in the microstructure from which cracks may initiate under mechanical loading. The main tool was a deformation analysis via digital image correlation in the SEM (SEM-DIC). This allows the identification and tracking of developing strain localizations at different potential crack initiation sites with a high resolution as well as capturing an overview over the whole specimen. An adapted frame averaging script minimized measurement errors induced by drift. The SEM-DIC results show that the deformation field is governed by the elastic incompatibility of the microstructural constituents. Crack initiation occurs because of the detachment of the Si + β-Al5FeSi phase boundary. Cracks then cross the phase boundary and propagate along twin boundaries in the β-Al5FeSi phase. Final failure is caused by linking fractured brittle plate-like particles.
Published Version
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