Formation and deformation mechanisms of gradient structures: The role of strain hardening

  • Taifeng Cao
  • , Zhouzhu Mao
  • , Shiyu Du
  • , Xiaofeng Qin
  • , Aiguo Pi
  • , Tuanwei Zhang*
  • , Zhihua Wang
  • *Corresponding author for this work

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

2 Citations (Scopus)

Abstract

Gradient structures (GS) have emerged as a focal point due to their capability to overcome the performance limitations of homogeneous materials. In this study, GS was prepared using the cyclic torsion method for low-carbon (LC) and twinning-induced plasticity (TP) steel, aiming to investigate the effect of strain hardening ability on the formation and deformation mechanisms of GS. The TP-GS steels exhibit a significant gradient distribution of hardness, dislocation cells (DCs), subgrains, stacking faults (SFs), and deformation twins (DTs). In contrast, LC-GS steels display only a dislocation density gradient. Finite element modelling (FEM) revealed the difference in stress gradient between two steels. After tensile deformation, denser, finer, and multi-level DTs are observed at the edge region of TP-GS steels, whereas the DCs in the center region evolve into dense SFs and DTs, preserving the significant gradient microstructure. Hardness and microstructure distributions reveal a “dynamic-enhanced gradient effect” at both the edge and center regions of TP-GS steels, leading to an excellent synergy of strength, plasticity, and work hardening ability. In contrast, LC-GS steels rely solely on the deformation potential of the center region, resulting in a “dynamic-weakened gradient effect”. This finding offers valuable insights for the design and preparation of GS.

Original languageEnglish
Article number114245
JournalMaterials and Design
Volume256
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - Aug 2025
Externally publishedYes

Keywords

  • Cyclic torsion
  • Dislocation cells
  • Finite element modelling
  • Gradient structure
  • Mechanical property

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