Abstract

Interstitial hydrogen atoms in titanium usually deteriorate the mechanical properties of titanium by brittle hydride phase or hydrogen-enhanced localized plasticity. In this study, hydride was used as the second phase to improve the tensile strength and elongation of TA1 pure titanium. The continuous coarse hydride network is precipitated in TA1 pure titanium after the hydrogen-charged. Then pulse current treatment is used to decompose the original coarse hydride network and reduce the size and number of hydride strips. Finally, a small uniform hydride network is formed in TA1 pure titanium. The results of tensile experiments indicate that the tensile strength of hydrogen-charged TA1 pure titanium treated by pulse current increases from the 286.4 MPa to 316.1 MPa and the elongation increases from the 47.6 % to 56.8 %. The improvement of mechanical properties demonstrate that the small and uniform hydrides can significantly improve the mechanical properties of TA1 pure titanium. In hydrogen-charged TA1 pure titanium treated by pulse current, the increment of strength is mainly caused by hard phase hydrides, and the increase in plasticity is attributed to the role of twins in coordinating deformation during plastic deformation. This study manifests that in addition to being used as a temporary alloying element to optimize the microstructure of titanium, hydrogen can also be directly act as a second phase in titanium to improve the mechanical properties.

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