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Part A: Materials Science

Microstructural evolution and grain subdivision mechanisms during severe plastic deformation of aluminum particles by ball milling

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Pages 1425-1447 | Received 02 Jan 2015, Accepted 15 Mar 2015, Published online: 09 Apr 2015
 

Abstract

Electron backscattered diffraction technique was used to investigate the microstructure of aluminum particles deformed by high-energy ball milling. The lengths of different types of boundaries per area were calculated for different samples. The results show that the deformation mechanism and the rate of grain subdivision changed considerably as milling time increased. At the beginning of the milling, deformation banding subdivided grains and dynamic recovery formed a cellular structure of low angle boundaries. After further milling, particles were flattened; an increase in the aspect ratio of the original grains together with cold welding of the particles contributed to the formation of high angle grain boundaries (HAGBs). Lattice rotation progressively increased the misorientation of low and medium angle boundaries and transformed them to HAGBs, which resulted in formation of new small equiaxed grains by continuous dynamic recrystallization. This research shows subgrain rotation was the main mechanism for formation of new HAGBs.

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