This study aims to understand the interplay between strength and ductility in metastable β-Ti alloys based on eutectoid and neutral elements. A low-cost ternary Ti-7Cr-4Sn alloy was prepared by furnace cooling from the single β region at the end of the primary processing. Although isothermal ω, a nano-precipitation generally considered to embrittle the material, is present in the obtained ultra-fine microstructure, the material still exhibits a balanced strength and ductility, with a yield stress of 1067 MPa and elongation of about 10 %. The obtained tensile properties surpass traditional primary processed Ti-6Al-4V, and are comparable to a range of expensive commercial high-strength aerospace Ti alloys. Multiple microstructural features, including grain boundary α (αGB), short rod shape primary α (αP), isothermal ω (ωiso) and ω assisted secondary α (αs) are characterised within the room temperature microstructure. Microstructural analysis reveals that strong Cr segregation in the β phase and slight partitioning of Sn between the α and β phase strengthens the β phase while also preserving ductility in the alloy. This results in a microstructure dominated by the ductile α phase and sub-micron α grain boundaries. This study also discusses the evolution of these microstructural features during different stages of cooling from β matrix, substantiating a promising alloy design strategy for affordable high-performance new Ti alloys.

Development of low-cost Ti alloys with a balanced strength and ductility with generation of ultra-fine microstructures

Simonelli, Marco
2025-01-01

Abstract

This study aims to understand the interplay between strength and ductility in metastable β-Ti alloys based on eutectoid and neutral elements. A low-cost ternary Ti-7Cr-4Sn alloy was prepared by furnace cooling from the single β region at the end of the primary processing. Although isothermal ω, a nano-precipitation generally considered to embrittle the material, is present in the obtained ultra-fine microstructure, the material still exhibits a balanced strength and ductility, with a yield stress of 1067 MPa and elongation of about 10 %. The obtained tensile properties surpass traditional primary processed Ti-6Al-4V, and are comparable to a range of expensive commercial high-strength aerospace Ti alloys. Multiple microstructural features, including grain boundary α (αGB), short rod shape primary α (αP), isothermal ω (ωiso) and ω assisted secondary α (αs) are characterised within the room temperature microstructure. Microstructural analysis reveals that strong Cr segregation in the β phase and slight partitioning of Sn between the α and β phase strengthens the β phase while also preserving ductility in the alloy. This results in a microstructure dominated by the ductile α phase and sub-micron α grain boundaries. This study also discusses the evolution of these microstructural features during different stages of cooling from β matrix, substantiating a promising alloy design strategy for affordable high-performance new Ti alloys.
2025
Deformation structure; Ductility; Ti-Cr-Sn alloy; Titanium alloys; Ultrafine grained microstructure;
Deformation structure
Ductility
Ti-Cr-Sn alloy
Titanium alloys
Ultrafine grained microstructure
File in questo prodotto:
File Dimensione Formato  
Development of low-cost Ti alloys with a balanced strength and ductility with generation of ultra-fine microstructures.pdf

accesso aperto

: Publisher’s version
Dimensione 3.13 MB
Formato Adobe PDF
3.13 MB Adobe PDF Visualizza/Apri

I documenti in IRIS sono protetti da copyright e tutti i diritti sono riservati, salvo diversa indicazione.

Utilizza questo identificativo per citare o creare un link a questo documento: https://hdl.handle.net/11311/1307434
Citazioni
  • ???jsp.display-item.citation.pmc??? ND
  • Scopus 6
  • ???jsp.display-item.citation.isi??? 6
social impact