Title of article :
The tensile and creep behavior of Mg–Zn Alloys
with and without Y and Zr as ternary elements
Author/Authors :
C. J. Boehlert، نويسنده ,
Issue Information :
دوهفته نامه با شماره پیاپی سال 2007
Abstract :
Tensile–creep experiments were conducted
in the temperature range 100–200 C and stress range
20–83 MPa for a series of magnesium–zinc–yttrium
(Mg-Zn-Y) and mangnesium-zinc–zirconium (Mg-Zn-
Zr) alloys ranging from 0 to 5.4 wt% Zn, 0 to
3 wt% Y, and 0 to 0.6 wt.% Zr. The greatest tensile–
creep resistance was exhibited by an Mg–4.1Zn–0.2Y
alloy. The room-temperature yield strength increased
with increasing Y content for Mg–1.6–2.0Zn alloys.
The greatest tensile strength and elongation was
exhibited by Mg–5.4Zn–0.6Zr. This alloy also exhibited
the finest grain size and the poorest creep resistance.
The measured creep exponents and activation energies
suggested that the creep mechanisms were dependent
on stress. For applied stresses greater than 40 MPa, the
creep exponents were between 4 and 8. For applied
stresses less than 40 MPa, the creep exponent was 2.2.
The calculated activation energies (Qapp) were dependent
on temperature where the Qapp values between
100 and 150 C (65 kJ/mol) were half those between
150 and 200 C for the same applied stress value
(30 MPa). Deformation observations indicated that the
grain boundaries were susceptible to cracking in both
tension and tension-creep, where at low applied
stresses grain boundary sliding was suggested where
strain accommodation occurred through grain boundary
cracking. Thus grain size and grain boundaries
appeared to be important microstructural parameters
affecting the mechanical behavior. Microstructural
effects on the tensile properties and creep behavior
are discussed in comparison to other Mg-based alloy
systems.
Journal title :
Journal of Materials Science
Journal title :
Journal of Materials Science