Abstract
Forming at elevated temperatures can significantly increase the ductility of aluminium alloys enabling the manufacture of complex-shaped panel components from sheets. This study describes and investigates two elevated temperature forming processes: Hot Form Quench (HFQ ® ) (Lin et al., 2008) and conventional hot forming (HF) of aluminium alloys, with various material condition and processing parameters in order to advance the understanding of forming characteristics and post-formed strength. High temperature uniaxial tensile tests of AA7075 under HFQ ® and HF conditions were performed to compare the stress-strain behaviors, ductility, and post-formed hardness. The results have shown that the ductility for HFQ ® condition was greater than that for the HF condition when forming temperature was below 400 °C. In addition, typical microstructural evolution, such as the low-melting phase of HFQ ® and precipitation of HF, were identified using fracture morphology observations and used to explain ductility differences exhibited in these processes. Post-formed hardness resulting from HF with different initial alloy temper and forming conditions were determined and compared with those from HFQ ® . Severe reduction in hardness was found for HF using both high quench-sensitive alloy AA7075 and low quench-sensitive alloy AA6082. For the first time, the effects of a variety of influencing factors are investigated systematically, including heating rate, initial alloy, temperature and strain rate, on the high temperature deformation and post-formed strength of heat-treatable aluminium alloys, which contributes to the thorough understanding of the correlation between forming conditions and microstructural evolutions.
Original language | English |
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Pages (from-to) | 87-96 |
Number of pages | 10 |
Journal | Journal of Materials Processing Technology |
Volume | 268 |
DOIs | |
Publication status | Published - Jun 2019 |
Externally published | Yes |
Keywords
- AA6082
- AA7075
- Ductility
- Elevated temperature
- Hardness
- HFQ
- Hot forming
ASJC Scopus subject areas
- Ceramics and Composites
- Computer Science Applications
- Metals and Alloys
- Industrial and Manufacturing Engineering