TY - JOUR
T1 - Promoting multiple deformation mechanisms and accelerating omega phase precipitation in metastable Ti-10Mo alloy via Cu addition
AU - Li, Meiqin
AU - Zhu, Zijiang
AU - Xu, Shun
AU - Pan, Shiwei
AU - Zhang, Fei
AU - Li, Gan
AU - Ming, Kaisheng
AU - Cheng, Jun
AU - Yang, Lin
AU - Fan, Qunbo
AU - Cheng, Xingwang
N1 - Publisher Copyright:
© 2025 Elsevier B.V.
PY - 2025/5/5
Y1 - 2025/5/5
N2 - Metastable titanium alloys usually exhibit low yield strength and rapid decline of strain hardening after reaching the peak. In this work, the addition of 3.5 wt% Cu into Ti-10Mo titanium alloy is investigated. The results indicate that Cu addition enhances both strength and ductility. Notably, the Ti-10Mo-3.5Cu alloy maintains a high strain-hardening ability after the peak, even at a large strain of 27 %. The microstructural evolution at interrupted strains shows that the addition of Cu promotes multiple twinning and phase transformation mechanisms, evidenced by the formation of {332} twins, stress-induced ω phase, stress-induced α″ phase, and {112} twins. For the purpose of utilizing isothermal ω phase (ωiso) to strengthen the alloy, low-temperature aging (150°C to 350°C) is performed, which significantly enhances the strength, but results in sensitivity of ductility reduction to the aging temperature. The experiment-based statistics reveal that the addition of Cu promotes the rapid precipitation of ωiso phase, facilitating the increase of strength. However, high-resolution TEM shows that the addition of Cu accelerates the collapse of ωiso phases, resulting in dramatic decrease of ductility at high aging temperatures. This work provides valuable insights into the design of metastable titanium alloys by regulating the deformation mechanisms and optimizing the precipitation of ωiso phase to achieve high performance.
AB - Metastable titanium alloys usually exhibit low yield strength and rapid decline of strain hardening after reaching the peak. In this work, the addition of 3.5 wt% Cu into Ti-10Mo titanium alloy is investigated. The results indicate that Cu addition enhances both strength and ductility. Notably, the Ti-10Mo-3.5Cu alloy maintains a high strain-hardening ability after the peak, even at a large strain of 27 %. The microstructural evolution at interrupted strains shows that the addition of Cu promotes multiple twinning and phase transformation mechanisms, evidenced by the formation of {332} twins, stress-induced ω phase, stress-induced α″ phase, and {112} twins. For the purpose of utilizing isothermal ω phase (ωiso) to strengthen the alloy, low-temperature aging (150°C to 350°C) is performed, which significantly enhances the strength, but results in sensitivity of ductility reduction to the aging temperature. The experiment-based statistics reveal that the addition of Cu promotes the rapid precipitation of ωiso phase, facilitating the increase of strength. However, high-resolution TEM shows that the addition of Cu accelerates the collapse of ωiso phases, resulting in dramatic decrease of ductility at high aging temperatures. This work provides valuable insights into the design of metastable titanium alloys by regulating the deformation mechanisms and optimizing the precipitation of ωiso phase to achieve high performance.
KW - Aging
KW - Cu addition
KW - Deformation mechanism
KW - Metastable titanium alloys
KW - Strain hardening
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=105002796462&partnerID=8YFLogxK
U2 - 10.1016/j.jallcom.2025.180467
DO - 10.1016/j.jallcom.2025.180467
M3 - Article
AN - SCOPUS:105002796462
SN - 0925-8388
VL - 1026
JO - Journal of Alloys and Compounds
JF - Journal of Alloys and Compounds
M1 - 180467
ER -