Competitive twinning behavior in magnesium and its impact on recrystallization and texture formation

  • I. Basu*
  • , T. Al-Samman
  • *Corresponding author for this work

    Research output: Contribution to journalArticleAcademicpeer-review

    38 Citations (Scopus)
    211 Downloads (Pure)

    Abstract

    Rolled pure Mg and Mg-1 wt% Gd alloy were subjected to room temperature in-plane compression along the rolling direction, followed by isochronal annealing treatments for 1 h. The results of deformation texture and microstructure showed substantial differences due to rare earth alloying. In spite of imposed c-axis extension during deformation, the Mg-1Gd alloy retained the initial texture with the majority of basal poles concentrated near the longitudinal direction of the used channel-die tool. Electron back scatter diffraction analysis of the deformation microstructure revealed a predominance of {10 (1) over bar1} compression and {10 (1) over bar1}-{10 (1) over bar2} double twins relative to coexisting {10 (1) over bar2} tension twins. This behavior was significantly contrasting in comparison with that of pure Mg, wherein first and second generation {1012} tension twins were observed in profuse quantities. Continuous dynamic recrystallization took place inside compression and double twins by means of slip assisted subgrain rotation about the [0001] axis giving rise to a sharp prismatic fiber of recrystallized orientations. This fiber was transformed into a randomized texture pattern during subsequent static recrystallization and grain growth due to a different discontinuous recrystallization mechanism. This resulted in a significant annealing texture weakening and an increase of the overall Schmid factor for basal slip.

    Original languageEnglish
    Pages (from-to)232-244
    Number of pages13
    JournalMaterials science and engineering a-Structural materials properties microstructure and processing
    Volume707
    DOIs
    Publication statusPublished - 7-Nov-2017

    Keywords

    • Texture
    • Dynamic recovery
    • Recrystallization
    • Magnesium
    • Rare-earths
    • GRAIN-BOUNDARY SEGREGATION
    • DYNAMIC RECRYSTALLIZATION
    • ALLOYS
    • DEFORMATION
    • METALS
    • SLIP
    • ZINC
    • DUCTILITY
    • NEODYMIUM

    Fingerprint

    Dive into the research topics of 'Competitive twinning behavior in magnesium and its impact on recrystallization and texture formation'. Together they form a unique fingerprint.

    Cite this