Abstract
Tube Cyclic Extrusion–Compression (TCEC) method is a novel severe plastic deformation technique developed for grain refining of cylindrical tubes to ultrafine grained (UFG)/nanostructured ones. In this method, tubes are fully constrained and deformed between chamber and mandrel with a small neck zone. The principle of TCEC technique which was adopted to impose severe plastic strains to the tubular materials was explained. Also, the deformation and grain fragmentation mechanism during TCEC was analyzed. The material deformation characteristics during TCEC were numerically simulated by FE code of ABAQUS/Explicit. The FEM results demonstrated that TCEC technique was able to impose extremely high plastic strains. The TCEC method was successfully applied to a commercially pure copper (99.99%) and significant grain refinement was achieved. TEM observation demonstrated the refinement of grains from the initial size of 45μm to 200–350nm after four processing cycles of TCEC. Microhardness measurements were carried out across the thickness of the initial and processed tubes. The results show good homogeneity of hardness distribution and an increase to 102Hv from initial value of 55Hv after four TCEC cycles. Mechanical properties of the specimens were extracted from tensile tests. The obtained results documented notable increase in the yield and ultimate strengths, whereas the uniform and total elongations decreased. Fracture surfaces after tensile tests were investigated by scanning electron microscopy (SEM), and the observed morphology indicates ductile fracture mode after four cycles of TCEC.
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More From: Progress in Natural Science: Materials International
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