Review on Hot Working Behavior and Strength of Calcium-Containing Magnesium Alloys

Publikation: Beiträge in ZeitschriftenÜbersichtsarbeitenForschung

Standard

Review on Hot Working Behavior and Strength of Calcium-Containing Magnesium Alloys. / Rao, Kamineni Pitcheswara; Prasad, Yellapregada Venkata Rama Krishna; Dharmendra, Chalasani et al.

in: Advanced Engineering Materials, Jahrgang 20, Nr. 9, 1701102, 09.2018.

Publikation: Beiträge in ZeitschriftenÜbersichtsarbeitenForschung

Harvard

APA

Vancouver

Rao KP, Prasad YVRK, Dharmendra C, Suresh K, Hort N, Dieringa H. Review on Hot Working Behavior and Strength of Calcium-Containing Magnesium Alloys. Advanced Engineering Materials. 2018 Sep;20(9):1701102. doi: 10.1002/adem.201701102

Bibtex

@article{106053fc888b409499e5dda887e0df35,
title = "Review on Hot Working Behavior and Strength of Calcium-Containing Magnesium Alloys",
abstract = "In recent years, calcium has been a chosen alloying element as an alternative to rare-earth elements for developing creep-resistant magnesium alloys, which find promising applications for components in automobile and aerospace industries, and as bio-implants. In this paper, the research covering the influence of Ca additions to several magnesium alloy systems on their strength, microstructure, and hot workability is reviewed. During mechanical processing, the formation of basal texture is considerably weakened by Ca addition. Ca-containing alloys have limited workability and can be processed only by choosing the right combination of temperature and strain rate that corresponds to the occurrence of dynamic recrystallization (DRX). This can be done without trial-and-error through the use of processing maps. The processing maps for hot working of low-Ca containing alloys typically exhibit three DRX domains while the maps for high-Ca alloys typically exhibit only two DRX domains. In particular, the high-Ca alloys have to be processed at lower strain rates and higher temperatures since the high volume content of intermetallic particles prevents DRX at high strain rates. Flow instabilities occur rampantly in Ca-containing alloys, particularly in high-Ca alloys, at lower temperatures and higher strain rates that have to be avoided during their thermo-mechanical processing.",
keywords = "Ca-containing Mg alloys, Hot workability, Processing maps, Strength, Thermo-mechanical processing, Engineering",
author = "Rao, {Kamineni Pitcheswara} and Prasad, {Yellapregada Venkata Rama Krishna} and Chalasani Dharmendra and Kalidass Suresh and Norbert Hort and Hajo Dieringa",
year = "2018",
month = sep,
doi = "10.1002/adem.201701102",
language = "English",
volume = "20",
journal = "Advanced Engineering Materials",
issn = "1438-1656",
publisher = "Wiley-VCH Verlag",
number = "9",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - Review on Hot Working Behavior and Strength of Calcium-Containing Magnesium Alloys

AU - Rao, Kamineni Pitcheswara

AU - Prasad, Yellapregada Venkata Rama Krishna

AU - Dharmendra, Chalasani

AU - Suresh, Kalidass

AU - Hort, Norbert

AU - Dieringa, Hajo

PY - 2018/9

Y1 - 2018/9

N2 - In recent years, calcium has been a chosen alloying element as an alternative to rare-earth elements for developing creep-resistant magnesium alloys, which find promising applications for components in automobile and aerospace industries, and as bio-implants. In this paper, the research covering the influence of Ca additions to several magnesium alloy systems on their strength, microstructure, and hot workability is reviewed. During mechanical processing, the formation of basal texture is considerably weakened by Ca addition. Ca-containing alloys have limited workability and can be processed only by choosing the right combination of temperature and strain rate that corresponds to the occurrence of dynamic recrystallization (DRX). This can be done without trial-and-error through the use of processing maps. The processing maps for hot working of low-Ca containing alloys typically exhibit three DRX domains while the maps for high-Ca alloys typically exhibit only two DRX domains. In particular, the high-Ca alloys have to be processed at lower strain rates and higher temperatures since the high volume content of intermetallic particles prevents DRX at high strain rates. Flow instabilities occur rampantly in Ca-containing alloys, particularly in high-Ca alloys, at lower temperatures and higher strain rates that have to be avoided during their thermo-mechanical processing.

AB - In recent years, calcium has been a chosen alloying element as an alternative to rare-earth elements for developing creep-resistant magnesium alloys, which find promising applications for components in automobile and aerospace industries, and as bio-implants. In this paper, the research covering the influence of Ca additions to several magnesium alloy systems on their strength, microstructure, and hot workability is reviewed. During mechanical processing, the formation of basal texture is considerably weakened by Ca addition. Ca-containing alloys have limited workability and can be processed only by choosing the right combination of temperature and strain rate that corresponds to the occurrence of dynamic recrystallization (DRX). This can be done without trial-and-error through the use of processing maps. The processing maps for hot working of low-Ca containing alloys typically exhibit three DRX domains while the maps for high-Ca alloys typically exhibit only two DRX domains. In particular, the high-Ca alloys have to be processed at lower strain rates and higher temperatures since the high volume content of intermetallic particles prevents DRX at high strain rates. Flow instabilities occur rampantly in Ca-containing alloys, particularly in high-Ca alloys, at lower temperatures and higher strain rates that have to be avoided during their thermo-mechanical processing.

KW - Ca-containing Mg alloys

KW - Hot workability

KW - Processing maps

KW - Strength

KW - Thermo-mechanical processing

KW - Engineering

UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=85047554170&partnerID=8YFLogxK

U2 - 10.1002/adem.201701102

DO - 10.1002/adem.201701102

M3 - Scientific review articles

AN - SCOPUS:85047554170

VL - 20

JO - Advanced Engineering Materials

JF - Advanced Engineering Materials

SN - 1438-1656

IS - 9

M1 - 1701102

ER -

DOI