zhangbing
|
- Professor
- Supervisor of Doctorate Candidates
- Supervisor of Master's Candidates
- Name (English):Robert Zhang
- Name (Pinyin):zhangbing
- School/Department:冶金工程学院
- Education Level:Postgraduate (Doctoral)
- Business Address:西安建筑科技大学
- Contact Information:359702589@qq.com
- Degree:Doctoral degree
- Professional Title:Professor
- Status:Employed
- Academic Titles:教授
- Alma Mater:西安建筑科技大学
- Teacher College:高性能金属材料制备与加工领军教授团队
- Discipline:Materials Processing Engineering
Other Contact Information
No content
- Paper Publications
Hot deformation, processing maps, and microstructural evolution of Ti/Ni/Ti layered composites
Release time:2024-04-29 Hits:
- Impact Factor:5.5
- DOI number:10.1016/j.matchar.2024.113939
- Journal:Materials Characterization
- Key Words:Ti/Ni/Ti layered composites;Hot deformation behavior;Rheological properties;Processing maps;Microstructural evolution
- Abstract:Ti/Ni/Ti layered composites, which combine the advantages of Ti and Ni, are widely used in sensor and biomedical applications due to their light weight, high strength, high conductivity, good stability and excellent corrosion resistance. However, it is difficult to control the structural parameters, microstructure, and mechanical properties of layered composites during co-deformation processing due to the distinct differences in the crystal structure, mechanical properties, and deformation behavior of Ti and Ni layers. In this paper, the hot deformation, processing maps, and microstructural evolution of Ti/Ni/Ti layered composites during hot deformation processing are investigated through hot compression tests at 550–850 °C/0.001–1.0 s−1, with a reduction of 65%. It is shown that the composites exhibit mainly dynamic recovery or similar dynamic recrystallization characteristics. Combined with the interface structure, processing maps and microstructure, the optimal parameters for Ti/Ni/Ti layered composites are 680–730 °C/0.007–0.015 s−1. During co-deformation, the microstructural evolution of the constituent layers is very complex. The deformation mechanism is mainly dynamic recovery (DRV), or DRV and dynamic recrystallization (DRX) in Ti layer, and work hardening (WH) or DRV in Ni layer.
- Indexed by:Article
- Discipline:Engineering
- Document Type:R
- Volume:212
- Page Number:113939
- ISSN No.:1044-5803
- Translation or Not:no
- Date of Publication:2024-01-01
- Included Journals:SCI
