The invention relates to a nanostructured material and, more particularly, a nanostructured titanium alloy having a developed α-titanium structure with enhanced material properties.
It is known that microstructure plays a key role in the establishment of mechanical properties. Depending on the processing method, a material's structure can be developed to enhance material properties. For instance, it is possible to modify the grain or crystalline structure of the material using mechanical, or thermo-mechanical processing techniques.
United States Patent Application 2011/0179848 discloses a commercially pure titanium product having enhanced properties for biomedical applications. The titanium product has a nanostructure, which provides enhanced properties in relation to the original mechanical properties, including mechanical strength, resistance to fatigue failure, and biomedical properties. It is disclosed that the known titanium product is first subject to severe plastic deformation (SPD) using an equal channel angular pressing (ECAP) technique at a temperature no more than 450° C. with the total true accumulated strain e≧4, and then subsequently developed using thermomechanical treatment with a strain degree from 40 to 80%. In particular, the thermomechanical treatment includes plastic deformation performed with a gradual decrease of temperature in the range T=450 . . . 350° C. and the strain rate of 10−2 . . . 10−4 s−1.
While this known technique achieves a higher level of mechanical properties for commercially pure titanium, there is a need to increase the level of tensile and/or shear strength, as well as fatigue properties in titanium alloys for various engineering applications, including but not limited to biomedical, energy, high performance sporting goods, and aerospace applications.
In view of these shortcomings, an object of the invention, among others, is to increase the level of strength and fatigue resistance of a titanium alloy.
As a result, a nanostructured titanium alloy article is provided. The nanostructured alloy includes a developed titanium structure having at least 80% of grains of a size ≦1.0 microns.
Exemplary embodiments of the invention will be described with reference to the accompanying drawings, of which:
The invention is a nanostructured titanium alloy that can be used in different industries for production of various useful articles, such as orthopedic implants, medical and aerospace fasteners, aerospace structural components, and high performance sporting goods. In an exemplary embodiment of the invention, a composition of commercially pure titanium, having an α-titanium matrix that may contain retained β-titanium particles, is processed to develop the structure to achieve a nanostructure with at least 80% of the grains being ≦1 micron. As a result, the nanostructured titanium alloy exhibits various material property changes such as an increase in tensile strength and/or shear strength and/or fatigue endurance limit. In particular, the nanostructured titanium alloy structure is developed using a combination of thermomechanical processing steps according to the invention. This process provides a developed microstructure having a preponderance of ultrafine grain and/or nanocrystalline structures.
The workpiece can be comprised of various commercially available titanium alloys known in the art, such as commercially pure titanium alloys (Grades1-4), Ti-6Al-4V, Ti-6Al-4V ELI, Ti-6Al-7Nb, Ti—Zr, or other known alpha, near alpha, and alpha-beta phase titanium alloys.
Accordingly, in other exemplary embodiments of the invention, an alpha-beta phase titanium alloy is processed from a combination of a severe plastic deformation process type and non-severe plastic deformation type thermomechanical processing steps to develop a nanostructure with at least 80% of the grains being ≦1 micron.
In an exemplary embodiment of the invention, a coarse grain commercially pure titanium alloy is used for the workpiece, which has the following composition by weight percent: nitrogen (N) 0.07% maximum, carbon (C) 0.1% maximum, hydrogen (H) 0.015% maximum, iron (Fe) 0.50% maximum, oxygen (O) 0.40% maximum, total of other trace impurities is 0.4% maximum, and titanium (Ti) as the balance.
Other titanium alloys may be used, including but not limited to other commercially pure titanium alloys, Ti-6Al-4V, Ti-6Al-4V ELI, Ti-6Al-7Nb, and Ti—Zr. Standard chemical compositions of these titanium alloys can be found in Tables 1-3, which identify the standard chemical compositions by wt % max. (ASTM B348-11, Standard specification for Titanium and Titanium Alloy Bars and Billets; ASTM F1295-11 Standard Specification for Wrought Titanium-6Aluminum-7Niobium Alloy for Surgical Implant Applications; ASTM F136-12a Standard Specification for Wrought Titanium-6Aluminum-4Vanadium ELI (Extra Low Interstitial) Alloy for Surgical Implant Applications; and Titanium Alloy Ti—Zr, U.S. Pat. No. 8,168,012).
The workpiece, for instance a rod or bar, is subjected to severe plastic deformation (“SPD”) and thermomechanical processing. The combined processing steps induce a large amount of shear deformation that significantly refines the initial structure by creating a large number of high angle grain boundaries (misorientation angle >15°) and high dislocation density.
In particular, in the exemplary embodiment, the workpiece is processed using an equal channel angular pressing-conform (ECAP-C) machine, which consists of a revolving wheel having a circumferential groove and two stationary dies that form a channel that intersect at a defined angle. However, it is also possible in other embodiments to subject the workpiece to severe plastic deformation using other known process types, including equal-channel angular pressing, equal channel angular extrusion, incremental equal channel angular pressing, equal channel angular pressing with parallel channels, equal channel angular pressing with multiple channels, hydrostatic equal channel angular pressing, cyclic extrusion and compression, dual roll equal channel angular extrusion, hydrostatic extrusion plus equal channel angular pressing, equal channel angular pressing plus hydrostatic extrusion, continuous high pressure torsion, torsional equal channel angular pressing, equal channel angular rolling or equal channel angular drawing.
Firstly, using the ECAP-C machine, the workpiece is pressed into the wheel groove and is driven through the channel by frictional forces generated between the workpiece and the wheel. A commercially pure titanium alloy workpiece is processed through the ECAP-C machine at temperatures below 500° C., preferably 100-300° C. Other titanium alloys: Ti6Al4V, Ti6Al4V ELI, and Ti6Al7Nb are processed through the ECAP-C machine at a temperature below 650° C., preferably 400-600° C. The workpiece passes through the ECAP-C machine between 1 and 12 times, preferably 4 to 8 times. The die is set at an angle of channel intersection between ψ=75° and ψ=135°, 90° to 120°, and 100° to 110°. To enable comparable structural evolution, a lower channel intersection angle will require fewer passes and/or higher temperature, and a higher channel intersection angle will require more passes and/or lower temperature. The workpiece is rotated around its longitudinal axis by an angle of 90° between each pass through the ECAP-C machine, which provides homogeneity in the developed structure. This method of rotation is known as ECAP route Bc. However, in other embodiments, the ECAP route may be changed, including but not limited to known routes A, C, BA, E, or some combination thereof.
After the workpiece has been processed using severe plastic deformation from the ECAP-C processing steps, the workpiece is then subjected to additional thermomechanical processing using non-SPD type metal forming techniques. In particular, the thermomechanical processing further evolves the structure of the workpiece, more than the ECAP-C alone. In the exemplary embodiment, one or more thermomechanical processing steps may be carried out, including but not limited to drawing, rolling, extrusion, forging, swaging, or some combination thereof. In the exemplary embodiment, the thermomechanical processing for commercially pure titanium alloy is carried out at temperatures T≦500° C., preferably room temperature to 250° C. Thermomechanical processing of titanium alloys: Ti6Al4V, Ti6Al4V ELI, and Ti6Al7Nb is carried out at temperatures not greater than 550° C., preferably 400-500° C. Thermomechanical processing provides a cross-sectional area reduction of ≧35%, preferably ≧65%.
The combination of severe plastic deformation and thermomechanical processing substantially refines the initial structure, which consists of an α-titanium matrix that may contain retained β-titanium particles, to a predominantly submicron grain size. In the exemplary embodiment of the invention, the ECAP-C process fragments the starting grain structure by introducing large numbers of twins and dislocations that organize to form dislocation cells with walls having a low misorientation angle <15°.
During thermomechanical processing, dislocation density increases, and some of the low angle cell walls evolve into high angle subgrain boundaries, enhancing strength while retaining usable ductility levels for industrial applications.
In the exemplary embodiment, the resulting nanostructured titanium alloy includes an α-titanium matrix that may contain retained β-titanium particles.
The size of these dislocation cells and subgrains can be measured by a variety of techniques including but not limited to transmission electron microscopy (TEM) and x-ray diffraction (XRD), in particular the extended-convolutional multi whole profile fitting procedure as applicable to XRD. For instance,
Table 4 shows typical room temperature mechanical property levels of the starting titanium alloys and the nanostructured titanium alloys according to the invention that can be achieved because of structure development.
Table 4 clearly demonstrates that the resulting nanostructured titanium alloys exhibit various material property changes, such as increased tensile strength and/or shear strength and/or fatigue endurance limit. In particular, the nanostructured titanium alloys according to the exemplary embodiment of the invention have a total tensile elongation greater than 10% and a reduction of area greater than 25%. In addition, the nanostructured titanium alloys have at least 80% of the grains with a size ≦1.0 microns, with approximately 20-40% of all grains having high angle grain boundaries, and ≧80% of all grains have a grain shape aspect ratio in the range 0.3 to 0.7. Additionally, the nanostructured titanium alloy articles have grains with an average crystallite size below 100 nanometers and a dislocation density of ≧1015 m−2.
Thus, the invention provides a nanocrystalline structure having enhanced properties from the starting workpiece, as a result of severe plastic deformation and thermomechanical processing.
Titanium alloys that may be used in accordance with the present invention include commercially pure titanium alloys (Grades 1-4), Ti-6Al-4V, Ti-6Al-4V ELI, Ti—Zr, or Ti-6Al-7Nb. The nanostructured titanium alloy in accordance with the present invention can be used to produce useful articles with enhanced material properties, including aerospace fasteners, aerospace structural components, high performance sporting goods, as well as articles for medical applications, such as spinal rods, screws, intramedullary nails, bone plates and other orthopedic implants. For example, the invention may provide aerospace fasteners comprised of nanostructured Ti alloy having increased ultimate tensile strength, such as above 1200 MPa, and increased shear strength, such as above 650 MPa.
The foregoing illustrates some of the possibilities for practicing the invention. Many other embodiments are possible within the scope and spirit of the invention. It is, therefore, intended that the foregoing description be regarded as illustrative rather than limiting, and that the scope of the invention is given by the appended claims together with their full range of equivalents.
This application is a Continuation-In-Part application of U.S. application Ser. No. 13/833,148, filed on Mar. 15, 2013.
Number | Date | Country | |
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Parent | 13833148 | Mar 2013 | US |
Child | 14212344 | US |