Abstract
The mechanical properties of Zr-based alloys, such as strength and elongation, are heavily dependent on the cooling rate during heat treatment. Understanding the phase transformation and microstructural evolution in various cooling media can establish the connection between the cooling rate and mechanical properties. The effect of the cooling rate on the phase, microstructure, and tensile properties of Zr-4Hf-3Nb (wt%) alloy is studied in this paper. The results show that the phase composition of the samples transforms from α+β to α+β+ω, and, finally, to α+α’+ω, while the average grain size of α phase decreases from 3.73 μm to 1.96 μm, and the distribution varies from compact to scattering as the cooling rate increases. Hf tends to distribute in β phase, and the slower cooling rate is beneficial to the existence of Hf. The strength and microhardness enhances monotonously, while the elongation ascends first, then decreases as the cooling rate increases. The high strength of water-cooling samples is attributed to the reduction in average grain size and volume fraction of α phase, and the lath α’ martensite and granular ω phase. The fracture pattern of Zr-4Hf-3Nb (wt%) alloy is ductile fracture, and the plasticity gets better with decreasing cooling rate.
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