Strengthening In Aluminum Alloys

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SUMMARY

The discussion centers on the mechanical properties of aluminum alloys and the influence of grain size on their strength. Participants agree that while grain size reduction generally increases yield strength in metals, the effect is less pronounced in aluminum alloys compared to steels due to the dominance of the Orowan mechanism. This mechanism involves dislocation interactions with particles, which can overshadow the impact of grain size. The conversation highlights the importance of understanding specific alloy characteristics when evaluating strengthening mechanisms.

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  • Understanding of mechanical properties of materials
  • Familiarity with dislocation theory in metallurgy
  • Knowledge of the Orowan strengthening mechanism
  • Basic concepts of grain size effects on yield strength
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Rasputin
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Hi everyone!

I have a question about mechanical properties of the materials. As I understand, when in metals microstructure the grains size decreases, the mechanical properties increases, specially metals strengthening.
But I have a discussion with one Prof. who says that this is a minor eefect in Al alloys as compare to the steels. In Al only an Orowan mechanism works. In this mechanism, the dislocation bends between the particles leaving a dislocation ring about each particle.

Is he right? Anyone can help me to find the strengthening mechanism in metals.

Thanks a lot.
 
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Your understanding is correct; grain size influences yield strength. (Anything that impedes dislocation motion in ductile polycrystalline materials increases strength.) However, perhaps your professor is saying that in a particular alloy, particle strengthening is so effective that changing grain size has little effect. Do you know what alloy he or she had in mind?
 
He means all kinds of aluminium as compare to steel where grain size have a big influence to its mechanical properties.
 
Rasputin,

Your professor must be nuts! When grains get down to the sub-micron level grain size most certainly will effect yielding. Dislocation pileup is a real effect and has been observed on TEM. Making blanket statements like that in Material Science is wrong!

modey3
 
Modey3, Thanks, I got this book and seems very good with good theories and their explaining.
 

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