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Insight from in situ microscopy into which precipitate morphology can enable high strength in magnesium alloys

journal contribution
posted on 2018-07-01, 00:00 authored by B Y Liu, N Yang, J Wang, Matthew BarnettMatthew Barnett, Y C Xin, D Wu, R L Xin, B Li, R L Narayan, J F Nie, J Li, E Ma, Z W Shan
Magnesium alloys, while boasting light weight, suffer from a major drawback in their relatively low strength. Identifying the microstructural features that are most effective in strengthening is therefore a pressing challenge. Deformation twinning often mediates plastic yielding in magnesium alloys. Unfortunately, due to the complexity involved in the twinning mechanism and twin-precipitate interactions, the optimal precipitate morphology that can best impede twinning has yet to be singled out. Based on the understanding of twinning mechanism in magnesium alloys, here we propose that the lamellar precipitates or the network of plate-shaped precipitates are most effective in suppressing deformation twinning. This has been verified through quantitative in situ tests inside a transmission electron microscope on a series of magnesium alloys containing precipitates with different morphology. The insight gained is expected to have general implications for strengthening strategies and alloy design.

History

Journal

Journal of materials science and technology

Volume

34

Issue

7

Pagination

1061 - 1066

Publisher

Elsevier

Location

Amsterdam, The Netherlands

ISSN

1005-0302

Language

eng

Publication classification

C1 Refereed article in a scholarly journal

Copyright notice

2018, Elsevier Ltd