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      Deformation Behavior of Al/Cu Clad Composite During Twist Channel Angular Pressing

      research-article
      Materials
      MDPI
      clad composite, rotary swaging, finite element analysis, effective strain, residual stress

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          Abstract

          The research and development of modern metallic materials goes hand in hand with increasing their lifetime via optimized deformation processing. The presented work deals with preparation of an Al/Cu clad composite with implemented reinforcing Cu wires by the method of twist channel angular pressing (TCAP). Single and double pass extrusion of the clad composite was simulated numerically and carried out experimentally. This work is unique as no such study has been presented so far. Detailed monitoring of the deformation behavior during both the passes was enabled by superimposed grids and sensors. Both the sets of results revealed that already the single pass imparted significant effective strain (higher than e.g., conventional equal channel angular pressing (ECAP)), especially to the Al matrix, and resulted in notable deformation strengthening of both the Al and Cu composite components, which was confirmed by the increased punch load and decreased plastic flow velocity (second pass compared to first pass). Processing via the second pass also resulted in homogenization of the imposed strain and residual stress across the composite cross-section. However, the investigated parameters featured slight variations in dependence on the monitored location across the cross-section.

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          Paradox of Strength and Ductility in Metals Processed Bysevere Plastic Deformation

          It is well known that plastic deformation induced by conventional forming methodssuch as rolling, drawing or extrusion can significantly increase the strength of metalsHowever, this increase is usually accompanied by a loss of ductility. For example, Fig.1 shows that with increasing plastic deformation, the yield strength of Cu and Almonotonically increases while their elongation to failure (ductility) decreases. Thesame trend is also true for other metals and alloys. Here we report an extraordinarycombination of high strength and high ductility produced in metals subject to severeplastic deformation (SPD). We believe that this unusual mechanical behavior is causedby the unique nanostructures generated by SPD processing. The combination ofultrafine grain size and high-density dislocations appears to enable deformation by newmechanisms. This work demonstrates the possibility of tailoring the microstructures ofmetals and alloys by SPD to obtain both high strength and high ductility. Materialswith such desirable mechanical properties are very attractive for advanced structuralapplications.
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            Grain boundary sliding revisited: Developments in sliding over four decades

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              Strain hardening and ductility in a coarse-grain/nanostructure laminate material

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                Author and article information

                Journal
                Materials (Basel)
                Materials (Basel)
                materials
                Materials
                MDPI
                1996-1944
                11 September 2020
                September 2020
                : 13
                : 18
                : 4047
                Affiliations
                Faculty of Materials Science and Technology, VŠB–Technical University of Ostrava, 70800 Ostrava, Czech Republic; radim.kocich@ 123456vsb.cz ; Tel.: +420-596-99-44-55
                Article
                materials-13-04047
                10.3390/ma13184047
                7559872
                32933103
                f8a4f6b1-e300-4d77-8dd3-4c50a801d137
                © 2020 by the author.

                Licensee MDPI, Basel, Switzerland. This article is an open access article distributed under the terms and conditions of the Creative Commons Attribution (CC BY) license ( http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/).

                History
                : 04 August 2020
                : 10 September 2020
                Categories
                Article

                clad composite,rotary swaging,finite element analysis,effective strain,residual stress

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