Abstract

In this study, the mechanical behavior and microstructure of a hot-rolled AZ31 magnesium alloy sheet under free-end torsion with torsional axis along rolling direction (RD), normal direction (ND) and 45° in ND-RD plane, have been investigated both experimentally and numerically. The mechanical behavior under torsion, including stress-strain response, Swift effect and strain hardening rate, present obvious anisotropy. The Swift effect is sensitive to the direction of torsion axis and exhibits remarkable anisotropy with axial elongation in ND sample and axial shortening in RD and 45° samples. The axial elongation or shortening is determined by both slips and extension twin, with extension twin exerting a greater influence on the extent of the axial deformation. During shear straining, the dominant deformation mode transforms basal slip to prismatic slip with the axial direction deviating from ND to RD, while the second-order pyramidal ⟨c+a⟩ slip is nearly not activated during whole deformation attributed to its high critical resolved shear stress. Based on the effective Schmid factor (ESF) of deformation modes, the grains with favored orientation would get activation of {101‾2} extension twin due to the high ESF, resulting in the different twin volume fractions. Additionally, the activation of twin relative to basal slip has a connection with the increasing trend of normalized strain hardening rate.

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