This application claims priority to Korean Patent Application No. 10-2013-0133968 filed on Nov. 6, 2013, the contents of which are incorporated herein by reference.
1. Field of the Invention
The present invention relates to a magnesium alloy for precipitation strengthening extrusion, and more particularly to a tin-containing magnesium alloy having superior mechanical properties, such as tensile strength, yield strength, and elongation.
2. Description of the Prior Art
For the sake of performance improvement and weight reduction of various mechanical devices, there have been ongoing studies to make mechanical devices, more particularly, various components thereof lightweight. As a metallic material for such weight reduction of components, magnesium (Mg) alloys have the lowest density among currently developed structural alloys, and exhibit superior properties regarding electromagnetic shielding and vibration absorption. Demand for Mg alloys is on the rise in various fields, such as transportation machines, industries related to portable components, etc.
According to a Mg extrusion process of the related art, a cast product manufactured through melting and casting is subjected to homogenization heat treatment before being extruded. In some cases, a precipitation strengthening Mg alloy is subjected to aging after the extrusion in order to improve mechanical properties to some extent.
In the related art, plastic deformation materials produced through the extrusion have typically been alloys containing solute contents within the solubilities of Mg, such as AZ31. In contrast, recent Mg extrusion material alloys having high strength and high tenacity contain a large amount of alloying elements added thereto. In the Mg extrusion material alloys, some crystallized phases that have been created after casting during homogenization heat treatment subsequent to melting and casting remain intact inside grains or at the grain boundary, causing irregular distributions of second phases after plastic deformation. This consequently brings adverse effects on the mechanical properties.
In order to overcome the above problem, solution treatment and aging are carried out before the extrusion to control the distribution and size of the second phases that can improve the strength of materials even after extrusion. The solution treatment is designed with an optimized temperature range in which the crystallized phases created after the melting and casting can be re-dissolved into the matrix. With the aging, the distribution of the second phases mentioned as a problem of the related-art process can be made uniform.
For reference,
As illustrated in
In order to obtain a Mg alloy having high strength, however, alloying elements have recently been added above the solubility in order to add high strength and high tenacity. That is, after casting, the crystallized phases of elements added above the solubility exist in the form of second phases, which are stable at room temperature. Therefore, crystallized phases that have been created in the α-Mg matrix remain intact at the homogenization temperature, and in particular, in the case of a precipitation strengthening-type alloying element, parts of supersaturated elements precipitate in the form of precipitates in the homogenization temperature range. That is, as illustrated in
The information disclosed in the Background of the Invention section is provided only for better understanding of the background of the invention and should not be taken as an acknowledgment or any form of suggestion that this information forms a prior art that would already be known to a person skilled in the art.
Various aspects of the present invention provide a magnesium (Mg) alloy able to overcome the above-mentioned problems of the related-art Mg alloy and have a uniform size of second phases, and a method of manufacturing the same.
Also provided is a Mg alloy having a reduced size of second phases and having both superior elongation and superior tensile strength and a method of manufacturing the same.
According to an aspect of the present invention, there is provided a Mg alloy including: an element selected from the group consisting of more than 0 weight % and 14 weight % or less of Sn, more than 0 weight % and 5 weight % or less of Li, more than 0 weight % and 40 weight % or less of Pb, more than 0 weight % and 17 weight % or less of Al, and more than 0 weight % and 5 weight % or less of Zn; and a remainder of Mg, wherein a second phase including at least one selected from the group consisting of Mg2Sn, Mg2Zn3, Mg47.2Zn36.9Al16.9, Mg17Al12, α-Mg/β-Li phase, and Mg2Pb is formed in the alloy, the second phase includes precipitation phases, and, among the precipitation phases constituting the second phase, precipitation phases having a size exceeding 10 μm are less than 0.1% of the entire precipitation phases.
The second phase of the Mg alloy is uniformly distributed in entire crystal grains.
The size of crystal grains of the Mg alloy is preferably substantially evenly distributed.
The Mg alloy may be a plastically deformed plate member.
In this case, the plastically deformed plate member may be an extruded plate member.
According to another aspect of the present invention, there is provided a method of manufacturing a Mg alloy, the method including the following steps of: dissolving and casting raw materials including an element selected from the group consisting of more than 0 weight % and 14 weight % or less of Sn, more than 0 weight % and 5 weight % or less of Li, more than 0 weight % and 40 weight % or less of Pb, more than 0 weight % and 17 weight % or less of Al, and more than 0 weight % and 5 weight % or less of Zn and a remainder of Mg; subjecting the cast Mg alloy to solution treatment; subjecting the Mg alloy, which has undergone solution treatment, to aging; and plastically deforming the aged Mg alloy, wherein a second phase comprising at least one selected from the group consisting of Mg2Sn, Mg2Zn3, Mg47.2Zn36.9Al16.9, Mg17Al12, α-Mg/β-Li phase, and Mg2Pb is formed in the alloy, the second phase comprises precipitation phases, and, among the precipitation phases constituting the second phase, precipitation phases having a size exceeding 10 μm are less than 0.1% of the entire precipitation phases.
In this case, the plastic deformation is preferably extrusion.
The second phase is uniformly distributed in entire crystal grains.
The size of crystal grains of the Mg alloy is preferably substantially evenly distributed.
Meanwhile, the description that the second phase is uniformly distributed in the entire crystal grains according to the present invention should be interpreted relatively. That is, the description that the second phase is uniformly distributed in the entire crystal grains does not mean that second phases or precipitation phases are concentrated at grain boundaries of crystal grains or at specific portions inside the grains, or are concentrated at some crystal grains and scarcely exist in some crystal grains as illustrated in
Furthermore, the description that the size of crystal grains of the Mg alloy is substantially evenly distributed is also relative: not all crystal grains have the same physical size, but small crystal grains have a size of a number of μm, and large crystal grains have a size exceeding 10 μm, as long as all crystal grains have substantially the same size in terms of metallography, within a range of a number of μm.
The Mg alloy according to the present invention or the Mg alloy manufactured by the method according to the present invention is advantageous in that second phases are uniformly distributed inside crystal grains, the size of which is 10 μm or less. Therefore, the Mg alloy according to the present invention has both superior elongation and tensile strength.
Hereinafter, an exemplary embodiment of a magnesium (Mg) alloy according to the present invention and a method of manufacturing the same will be described in detail with reference to the accompanying drawings.
As illustrated in
That is, as illustrated in
That is, when homogenization is performed after casting according to the prior art, the second phase, i.e. precipitate phase, exhibits uneven distribution, and the size of recrystallization crystal grains also exhibits uneven distribution. When solution treatment and aging are performed according to the present embodiment, in contrast, the second phase, i.e. precipitation phase, has even distribution, and the size of recrystallization crystal grains can also have even distribution.
In addition, when homogenization is performed according to the prior art, fine precipitates may occur even at homogenization and plastic deformation temperatures, but coarse crystallized phases formed after casting are largely distributed unevenly. According to the present embodiment, in contrast, a precipitation process occurs by means of aging before plastic deformation, so that large second phases that have a size of 2 μm or larger trigger undergo nucleation during recrystallization throughout the entire alloy, due to the PSN (particle stimulated nucleation) effect. Precipitate phases generated during aging, second phases that grow slowly. Small precipitates that have been generated during plastic deformation and since grown with a size of about 2 μm or less are distributed at grain boundaries after creation of recrystallization grains and disturb the growth of grains (pinning effect). Therefore, the alloy according to the present embodiment subjected to solution treatment and aging has a big difference regarding the microstructure, compared with an alloy subjected to related-art homogenization, and exhibits substantially improved mechanical properties.
Results of comparisons between a Mg alloy formed according to an exemplary embodiment of the present invention and a Mg alloy formed using related-art homogenization using various methods will now be described with reference to
Furthermore, Mg alloys described with reference to
1. Melting and Casting Step (Common Step)
Component elements of each alloy described above are measured in terms of weight %, are melted in an electric resistance furnace that is maintained at 750° C. in SF6+CO2 mixed gas atmosphere, and are cast in a mold having a diameter of 52 mm and a length of 100 mm.
2. Case 1
2-1. Homogenization Step
After casting, the test piece is loaded into an electric resistance furnace maintained at 330° C., is maintained for 24 hours, and is water-cooled.
2-2. Extrusion Step
After the test piece is loaded into an electric resistance furnace (inside an extruder) maintained at 300° C., a thermometer is attached to the test piece, and, when the temperature reaches 270° C., the test piece is instantly extruded at an extrusion ratio of 19:1.
The above method gives a rod-shaped test piece having an initial diameter of 49.5 mm and, after extrusion, a plate-shaped test piece with cross section of 25×4 mm2.
3. Case 2
3-1. Solution Treatment Step
Mg—Sn binary alloy is maintained at 450° C. for 24 hours and is water-cooled. Mg—Sn—Zn(—Al) alloy is maintained at 330° C. for 18 hours, is temperature-raised to 450° C. for two hours, maintained for 12 hours, and is water-cooled.
3-2. Aging Step
Test pieces are loaded into an electric resistance furnace maintained at 200° C. Mg—Sn binary alloy is maintained for 500 hours, and Mg—Sn—Zn(—Al) ternary (quaternary) alloy is maintained for 24 hours. Subsequently, both of the alloys are air-cooled.
3-3. Extrusion Step
In the same manner as the process of Case 1, after the test piece is loaded into an electric resistance furnace (inside an extruder) maintained at 300° C., a thermometer is attached to the test piece. When the temperature reaches 270° C., the test piece is instantly extruded at an extrusion ratio of 19:1.
The above method gives a rod-shaped test piece having an initial diameter of 49.5 mm and, after extrusion, a plate-shaped test piece with cross section of 25×4 mm2.
4. Tensile Test
A test piece having ASTM specification gauge length of 25 mm (KSB0801 proportional test piece no. 13B) is machined and subjected to a tensile test under a condition of initial strain rate: 1×10−3.
In addition,
Although a method of manufacturing a Mg alloy, which includes Sn, and advantageous effects thereof have been described above, those skilled in the art, to which the present invention pertains, could understand that the Mg alloy according to the present invention can be applied similarly when Zn, Al, Li, and Pb are included, besides Sn. It is apparent to a person skilled in the art to which the present invention pertains that various changes and modifications can be made to the above configuration. Therefore, the scope of the present invention is solely limited by the accompanying claims.
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
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10-2013-0133968 | Nov 2013 | KR | national |