Magnesium is the lightest known structural metal, approximately ⅕ the density of steel, ½ the density of titanium, and ⅔ the density of aluminum. Magnesium alloys represent potential weight savings and therefore fuel savings across the entire transportation industry. Predominant texture (also called “basal texture”, and hereinafter called “texture”) in magnesium alloys is an important factor limiting the formability of magnesium alloys. Certain cost barriers have heretofore precluded widespread utilization of magnesium and magnesium alloys. Two cost factors addressed in recent initiatives include (1) elimination of rare earth alloying elements and (2) lowering the forming temperature.
Magnesium alloys containing rare earth elements have been developed that have improved formability over conventional magnesium alloys, and allow forming to take place at temperatures below 200° C. The 200° C. threshold is desirable for economic reasons and is the approximate upper temperature limit where conventional oil based lubricants can be used for die lubrication during forming. The removal of the die lubricants with solvents in automated machinery falls within the normal parameters associated with low cost forming operations. Forming operations that are required to take place above 200° C. use solid lubricants where post forming lubricant removal is by mechanical means, followed by surface buffing to achieve acceptable surface finishes. The labor input and processing complexities associated with removal of solid lubricants after forming adds undue cost and limits magnesium's potential use in high volume complex geometry automotive panels. The rare earth containing alloys that allow forming below 200° C. however are more costly and could become scarce due to the supply of rare earth metals. Therefore, initiatives for magnesium sheet in automotive application have been focused on achieving equivalent or superior formability at 200° C. and below, without rare earth additions.
Conventional non rare earth containing magnesium and magnesium alloy sheet require forming temperatures above 300° C., due to the presence of an undesirable strong hexagonal close packed crystalline texture, inherent in the sheet after conventional processing that includes symmetric rolling. Such a texture is the reason metal sheet is insufficiently ductile for forming into useful shapes below 200° C. Therefore a need exists for processing magnesium sheet by shear rolling in the range of 180-250° C. to form a disrupted texture, and avoid formation of an undesirable, strong hexagonal close packed texture, thereby producing desired forming characteristics at 200° C. and below.
The skilled artisan will find helpful information regarding the use of asymmetric rolling to decrease the strong texture of Mg in the following publication:
The skilled artisan will find helpful information regarding the use of asymmetric rolling to decrease the strong basal texture of Mg—Al—Zn alloy in the following publications:
In accordance with one aspect of the present invention, the foregoing and other objects are achieved by a machine for asymmetric rolling of a work-piece that includes a pair of rollers disposed in an arrangement to apply opposing, asymmetric rolling forces to roll a work-piece therebetween, wherein a surface of the work-piece is rolled faster than an opposite surface of the work-piece; and an exit constraint die rigidly disposed adjacent an exit side of the pair of rollers so that, as the work-piece exits the pair of rollers, the work-piece contacts the exit constraint die to constrain curling of the work-piece.
In accordance with another aspect of the present invention, a method of rolling a work-piece includes the steps of heating a work-piece to a preselected rolling temperature, rolling the work-piece asymmetrically to form a tilted crystalline texture in the work-piece, and constraining the rolled work-piece in at least one direction to limit curling of the rolled work-piece and maintain the tilted crystalline texture as the rolled work-piece exits the rolling step.
In accordance with a further aspect of the present invention, a method of rolling a magnesium-containing metal body includes the steps of heating the metal body to a preselected rolling temperature in the range of 130° C. to 350° C., rolling the metal body asymmetrically to form a tilted crystalline texture in the metal body, and constraining the rolled metal body in at least one direction to limit curling of the rolled metal body and maintain the tilted crystalline texture as the rolled metal body exits the rolling step.
For a better understanding of the present invention, together with other and further objects, advantages and capabilities thereof, reference is made to the following disclosure and appended claims in connection with the above-described drawings.
The present invention involves applying asymmetric rolling (also called shear rolling) to a metallic work-piece at temperatures below 300° C. in order to appreciably disrupt the hexagonal close packed crystalline texture and produce an improved, tilted texture having significantly improved formability. The present invention is suitable for rolling hexagonal close packed, body center cubic, and face centered cubic crystalline structured metals and alloys that comprise, for example, magnesium, beryllium, titanium, tantalum, iron, aluminum and copper. The invention is particularly suitable for rolling rare-earth-free magnesium alloys such as AZ31B for example, which is commercially available from sundry sources worldwide.
The present invention is most suited for processing metallic sheets of finite length where the processed work-piece is essentially flat. The skilled artisan will recognize that the present invention is not intended for processing roll-to-roll work-pieces.
Referring to
In accordance with an example of the present invention, an exit constraint die assembly 22 is rigidly disposed adjacent the exit side of the working rolls 12, 14. The exit constraint die assembly 22 is comprised of an upper stripper plate 24, a lower stripper plate 26, and support means, including a mounting base 28 and bracket 30. The exit constraint die assembly 22 defines a slot 32 through which a work-piece exiting the working rolls 12, 14 must pass. The upper stripper plate 24 has a nose portion 34 terminating in a stripper blade 38 that fits closely to, but generally should not touch the upper working roll 12 in order to strip (catch) the exiting work-piece and prevent it from curling upwardly around the upper working roll 12. For example, the stripper blade 38 can be in the range 0.001″ to 0.005″ from the upper working roll 12.
In this example the upper stripper plate 24 has a length that defines the length of the slot 32. The lower stripper plate 26 can, as shown, extend further rearward for its support and also serves as a support for a work-piece exiting the slot 32. The skilled artisan will recognize that the upper stripper plate 24 can be of greater length so that the lower stripper plate 26 can define the length of the slot 32, and that upper stripper plate 24 and the lower stripper plate 26 can be of the same length.
The upper stripper plate 24 has ear portions 36 that determine the height and define the width of the slot 32. The lower stripper plate 26 functions to further define the slot 32 and ensure that, upon exiting the exit constraint die assembly 22, the work-piece is as straight as desired, depending on dimensions and placement of the exit constraint die assembly 22 that defines the slot 32.
Height of the slot 32 relative to the thickness of the work-piece as it exits the working rolls 12, 14 is important; it should be sufficiently small for the work-piece to be straightened to the desired extent, but not so small as to cause excessive friction, resulting in the work-piece failing to pass through the slot and crumpling. Moreover, the length of the slot 32 should also be sufficiently long for the work-piece to be straightened to the desired extent, but not so long as to cause excessive friction, resulting in the work-piece failing to pass through the slot and crumpling.
In accordance with the present invention, it is critically important to pass the work-piece through the exit constraint die assembly 22 in order to straighten the work-piece.
Isothermal processing (rolling and/or exit constraint) is optional, but beneficial for processing in various cases where precise control of temperature is desired. For example, one or both of the working rolls 12, 14 can be heated by respective core resistance heaters 60, 62, respectively, as shown in
In some cases, particularly with extremely thin work-pieces, it may be helpful to employ means for reducing friction between the work-piece and the exit constraint die assembly 22. For example, a fluid lubricant may be applied to the work-piece and/or the exit constraint die assembly 22. Moreover, the upper stripper plate 24, with which the work-piece first comes in contact, and therefore is most prone to friction, can be polished and/or coated with a friction-reducing coating such as a polymer or glaze. Examples of friction-reducing coating materials include, but are not limited to graphite and graphite-containing materials, and fluoropolymers such as polytetrafluoroethylene (PTFE).
The skilled artisan will recognize that
Tests were run in accordance with examples of the present invention using a rolling mill adapted for asymmetric rolling by employing different size rollers rotating at the same revolutions per minute. However rolling mills can be adapted for asymmetric rolling in accordance with the present invention by employing same size rollers rotating at different speeds, or by employing different size rollers rotating at different speeds.
Asymmetric rolling of two magnesium alloys, AZ31B and ZEK100, was tested on a 4 high rolling mill as shown in
Rolling temperature was controlled so that rolling and exit constraint were carried out at temperatures in a range of about 130° C. to about 350° C. Achievable thickness reduction per pass can be increased by increasing the rolling temperature, but the increased heating cost will, at some temperature, offset the efficiency thereof.
Roll pass sequence can be carried out as follows, considering rolling temperature and reduction-per-pass. Reduction per pass in this work varied from 2%-25% with an optimal reduction per pass being approximately 5% based on the mill peculiarities. Different alloys of magnesium have different working temperatures, and are typically deformed below 400° C. Each alloy is unique in its ability to accept deformation by rolling without detrimental cracking. Generally, alloys with rare earth additions have a higher tolerance for large amounts of deformation at lower temperatures than do the conventional alloys such as AZ31B, for example. Variables that effect the reduction per pass limits are starting material thickness, material width, roll diameter, alloy composition, mill torque capabilities, mill separating force capabilities, roll temperature and of course the unique deformation characteristics of the metal. In all cases the present invention performs its design intent.
The skilled artisan will recognize that a rolling mill can be configured in the inverted configuration whereby the upper working roll 12 will move the upper surface of a work-piece at a faster rate than the lower working roll 14. The exit constraint system can be inverted accordingly to accommodate down-curling. Rolling mill configurations that are tooled for work-piece up-curling or work-piece down-curling during asymmetric rolling are considered to fall within the scope of the invention.
Magnesium alloy AZ31B work-pieces were preheated to 135° C. and rolled in accordance with the present invention as follows: Two sequences were rolled on AZ31B 1) maximal deformation per pass to find the limits of deformation and 2) sequential passes to find the deformation limits in multiple passes. The maximum achievable deformation in a single pass at 135° C. preheat for AZ31B was 20%. Deformation above 20% strain resulted in material failure. The single pass schedules for three samples are shown below in Table 1.
The process of Example I was repeated, but with a multiple pass schedule shown in Table 2, which allowed for an accumulation of strain up to 28% when a sample of AZ31B was heated to 135° C.
The present invention performed according to design and restricted the exit curl without deleteriously affecting the rolling process or desired results.
Magnesium alloy AZ31B work-pieces were preheated to 180° C. and rolled in accordance with the present invention as follows: A multiple pass sequence of 4% to 8% strain per pass with a preheat temperature of 180° C. is shown in Table 3. The present invention successfully restricted the exit curl of the sheet on each pass.
Magnesium alloy AZ31B work-pieces were preheated to 225° C. and rolled in accordance with the present invention as follows: A multiple pass sequence of 4% to 14% strain per pass with a preheat temperature of 225° C. is shown in Table 4.
Further AZ31B work-pieces were rolled and examined for evidence of recrystallization.
A work-piece of magnesium alloy ZEK100, a rare earth containing alloy, was rolled in accordance with the present invention, resulting in an essentially flat work-piece having an improved texture. An example rolling schedule is shown in Table 5. The invention again performed according to design parameter and restricted exit curling. In all cases the invention restricted the exit curl. Table 5 shows the ZEK100 rolling schedule and results at 180° C. metal temperature in a multiple pass sequence.
The present invention is also applicable to other hexagonal closed packed crystalline metals such as, for example beryllium and titanium, to effect texture improvement; body center cubic crystalline metals such as tantalum, iron, and various steels to impart texture; and face centered cubic metals such as aluminum and copper to impart texture.
A beryllium work-piece is rolled in accordance with the present invention, resulting in an essentially flat work-piece having an improved texture.
A titanium work-piece is rolled in accordance with the present invention, resulting in an essentially flat work-piece having an improved texture.
A tantalum work-piece is rolled in accordance with the present invention, resulting in an essentially flat work-piece having an improved texture.
An iron work-piece is rolled in accordance with the present invention, resulting in an essentially flat work-piece having an improved texture.
A steel work-piece is rolled in accordance with the present invention, resulting in an essentially flat work-piece having an improved texture.
An aluminum work-piece is rolled in accordance with the present invention, resulting in an essentially flat work-piece having an improved texture.
A copper work-piece is rolled in accordance with the present invention, resulting in an essentially flat work-piece having an improved texture.
While there has been shown and described what are at present considered to be examples of the invention, it will be obvious to those skilled in the art that various changes and modifications can be prepared therein without departing from the scope of the inventions defined by the appended claims.
The United States Government has rights in this invention pursuant to contract no. DE-AC05-00OR22725 between the United States Department of Energy and UT-Battelle, LLC.