Content:
Due to an attractive combination of physical, chemical and mechanical properties, titanium and titanium alloys have become promising candidates in the field of chemical industry, aerospace and biomedical materials. During manufacturing procedures and applications, components are exposed to environments that can act as sources of hydrogen. Therefore, understanding their interaction with hydrogen upon various mechanical/thermal processing is important so that their properties and performance can be controlled and reliably predicted. With the aim of enhancing the properties and performance of titanium and reducing the cost of manufacturing products, the present work is primarily focusing on the effect of hydrogen on the cold rolling behavior and the subsequent annealing of titanium and titanium alloy characterized by different crystalline structure, i.e. hexagonal and body cubic centered (bcc) structure for the commercial pure titanium Ti50A and metastable β-titanium alloy β-21S, respectively. Since the microstructure of titanium and its alloys is the governing factor that determines their properties and performance, the microstructural evolution in the presence of hydrogen upon various procedures was analyzed by combination of XRD, SEM-EBSD and TEM. The introduction of hydrogen in Ti50A by electrolytic method induced the precipitation of two types of hydrides (δ-TiHx, ε-TiH2) in the phase matrix, and it was found that the volume fraction of these hydrides increased as the charging time increased. Five orientation relationships (ORs), three of them being new orientation relationships ever reported, between the -phase and the hydride δ-TiHx were determined. Moreover, the correlation between the rolling texture and the hydride precipitation was also established. It was found that the existence of the rolling texture facilitated the precipitation of δ-hydride following the OR2-type orientation relationship. X-ray analyses revealed a broadening of the diffraction peaks corresponding to the phase, indicating a increase of the dislocation density, these dislocations being necessary to accommodate the lattice misfit between hydrides and the matrix. Under compression loading, the observation of slip traces and tension twin {10 2} TT1 in the -grains containing hydrides, suggested that the hydrides had a certain ability to accommodate the imposed shear strain, depending on the orientation relationships between the matrix and the hydrides as well as on their thickness. Although no correlation between the nucleation of twinning and the hydride could be established in this study, the hydrides seemed to play an important role on the development of twinning deformation. The effects of hydrogen on the cold rolling behavior in Ti50A showed that, the formation of TT1tension twins can be facilitated due to the increase of the c/a ratio owing to the hydrogen addition and the existence of local stresses generated by the precipitation of hydrides. The refinement of the microstructure was also observed in the hydrogenated Ti50A-H suggesting that the presence of hydrides can enhance the generation of high angle boundaries (HABs). In addition, the formation of numerous geometrically necessary dislocations (GND) allowing the accommodation of the strain incompatibility between the hydride and matrix could be worked out by SEM-EBSD, which also confirmed analyses of the X-ray traces. In the case of β-21S alloy, with bcc structure that can accommodate a larger concentration of interstitial atoms, hydrogen was introduced by gas method. The effect of hydrogen on the microstructure was found to be closely related to the hydrogen concentration. In the range of hydrogen/metal ratio 0.052 dans les -grains contenant des hydrures a suggéré que les hydrures avaient une certaine capacité à supporter une déformation de cisaillement, en fonction des relations d'orientation entre la matrice et les hydrures mais aussi de leur épaisseur. Bien qu'aucune corrélation directe entre la nucléation des macles et la présence des hydrures n'ait été établie dans cette étude, l'effet des hydrures sur le développement des macles a été constaté. En étudiant l'effet de l'hydrogène sur le comportement au laminage à froid dans Ti50A, il a été possible de montrer que la formation de macle de type TT1 peut être facilitée par l'augmentation du rapport c/a de la maille hexagonale résultant de l'addition de l'hydrogène et de l'existence de contraintes locales générées par la précipitation des hydrures. Un raffinement de la microstructure a également été observé dans le Ti50A hydrogéné, ce qui suggère que la présence d'hydrures a tendance à générer de nouveaux grains de fortes désorientations (HAB). En outre, de nombreuses dislocations géométriquement nécessaires (GND) permettant de tenir compte de l'incompatibilité de contrainte entre l'hydrure et [.]
Note:
Dissertation HAL CCSD 2017
Language:
English
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