1. Field of the Technology
The present disclosure relates to methods of forging metal alloys, including metal alloys that are difficult to forge due to low ductility. Certain methods according to the present disclosure impart strain in a way that maximizes the buildup of disorientation into the metal grain crystal structure and/or second-phase particles, while minimizing the risk of initiation and propagation of cracks in the material being forged. Certain methods according to the present disclosure are expected to affect microstructure refinement in the metal alloys.
2. Description of the Background of the Technology
Ductility is an inherent property of any given metallic material (i.e., metals and metal alloys). During a forging process, the ductility of a metallic material is modulated by the forging temperature and the microstructure of the metallic material. When ductility is low, for example, because the metallic material has inherently low ductility, or a low forging temperature must be used, or a ductile microstructure has not yet been generated in the metallic material, it is usual practice to reduce that amount of reduction during each forge iteration. For example, instead of forging a 22 inch octagonal workpiece to a 20 inch octagon directly, a person ordinarily skilled in the art may consider initially forging to a 21 inch octagon with forging passes on each face of the octagon, reheating the workpiece, and forging to a 20 inch octagon with forging passes on each face of the octagon. This approach, however, may not be suitable if the metal exhibits strain-path sensitivity and a specific final microstructure is to be obtained in the product. Strain-path sensitivity can be observed when a critical amount of strain must be imparted at given steps to trigger grain refinement mechanisms. Microstructure refinement may not be realized by a forge practice in which the reductions taken during draws are too light.
In a situation where the metallic material is low temperature sensitive and is prone to cracking at low temperatures, the on-die time must be reduced. A method to accomplish this, for example, is to forge a 22 inch octagonal billet to a 20 inch round cornered square billet (RCS) using only half of the passes that would be required to forge a 20 inch octagonal billet. The 20 inch RCS billet may then be reheated and the second half of passes applied to form a 20 inch octagonal billet. Another solution for forging low temperature sensitive metallic materials is to forge one end of the workpiece first, reheat the workpiece, and then forge the other end of the workpiece.
In dual phase microstructures, microstructure refinement starts with sub-boundary generation and disorientation buildup as a precursor to processes such as, for example, nucleation, recrystallization, and/or second phase globularization. An example of an alloy that requires disorientation build up for refinement of microstructure is Ti-6Al-4V alloy (UNS R56400) forged in the alpha-beta phase field. In such alloys, forging is more efficient in terms of microstructure refinement when a large reduction is imparted in a given direction before the workpiece is rotated. This can be done on a laboratory scale using multi-axis forging (MAF). MAF performed on small pieces (a few inches per side) in (near-) isothermal conditions and using very low strain rates with proper lubrication is able to impart strain rather homogeneously; but departure from any of these conditions (small scale, near-isothermal, with lubrication) may result in heterogeneous strain imparted preferentially to the center as well as ductility issues with cold surface cracking. An MAF process for use in industrial scale grain refinement of titanium alloys is disclosed in U.S. Patent Publication No. 2012/0060981 A1, which is incorporated by reference herein in its entirety.
It would be desirable to develop a method of working that provides sufficient strain to a metallic material to initiate microstructure refinement mechanisms efficiently through forging, while limiting ductility issues.
According to a non-limiting aspect of the present disclosure, a method of forging a metallic material workpiece comprises open die press forging the workpiece at a forging temperature in a first forging direction up to a reduction ductility limit of the metallic material. Open die press forging the workpiece up to the reduction ductility limit of the metallic material is repeated one or more times at the forging temperature in the first forging direction until a total amount of strain imparted in the first forging direction is sufficient to initiate microstructure refinement. The workpiece is then rotated a desired degree of rotation.
The rotated workpiece is open die press forged at the forging temperature in a second forging direction up to the reduction ductility limit of the metallic material. Open die press forging the workpiece up to the ductility limit of the metallic material is repeated one or more times at the forging temperature in the second forging direction until a total amount of strain imparted in the second forging direction is sufficient to initiate microstructure refinement.
The steps of rotating, open die press forging, and repeating open die press forging are repeated in a third forging and, optionally, one or more additional directions until a total amount of strain to initiate grain refinement is imparted in the entire volume of the workpiece. The workpiece is not rotated until a total amount of strain that is sufficient to initiate microstructure refinement is imparted in each of the third and one or more additional directions.
According to another non-limiting embodiment of the present disclosure, a method of split pass open die forging a metallic material workpiece to initiate microstructure refinement comprises providing a hybrid octagon-RCS workpiece comprising a metallic material. The workpiece is upset forged. The workpiece is subsequently rotated for open die drawing on a first diagonal face in an X′ direction of the hybrid octagon-RCS workpiece. The workpiece is multiple pass draw forged in the X′ direction to the strain threshold for microstructure refinement initiation. Each multiple pass draw forging step comprises at least two open press draw forging steps with reductions up to the reduction ductility limit of the metallic material.
The workpiece is rotated for open die drawing on a second diagonal face in a Y′ direction of the hybrid octagon-RCS workpiece. The workpiece is multiple pass draw forged in the Y′ direction to the strain threshold for microstructure refinement initiation. Each multiple pass draw forging step comprises at least two open press draw forging steps with reductions up to the reduction ductility limit of the metallic material.
The workpiece is rotated for open die drawing on a first RCS face in a Y direction of the hybrid octagon-RCS workpiece. The workpiece is multiple pass draw forged in the Y direction to the strain threshold for microstructure refinement initiation. Each multiple pass draw forging step comprises at least two open press draw forging steps with reductions up to the reduction ductility limit of the metallic material.
The workpiece is rotated for open die drawing on a second RCS face in an X direction of the hybrid octagon-RCS workpiece. The workpiece is multiple pass draw forged in the X direction to the strain threshold for grain refinement initiation. Each multiple pass draw forging step comprises at least two open press draw forging steps with reductions up to the reduction ductility limit of the metallic material The steps of upsetting and multiple draw forging cycles can be repeated as desired to further initiate and or enhance microstructure refinement in the metallic material.
The features and advantages of the methods and articles described herein may be better understood by reference to the accompanying drawings in which:
The reader will appreciate the foregoing details, as well as others, upon considering the following detailed description of certain non-limiting embodiments according to the present disclosure.
It is to be understood that certain descriptions of the embodiments described herein have been simplified to illustrate only those elements, features, and aspects that are relevant to a clear understanding of the disclosed embodiments, while eliminating, for purposes of clarity, other elements, features, and aspects. Persons having ordinary skill in the art, upon considering the present description of the disclosed embodiments, will recognize that other elements and/or features may be desirable in a particular implementation or application of the disclosed embodiments. However, because such other elements and/or features may be readily ascertained and implemented by persons having ordinary skill in the art upon considering the present description of the disclosed embodiments, and are therefore not necessary for a complete understanding of the disclosed embodiments, a description of such elements and/or features is not provided herein. As such, it is to be understood that the description set forth herein is merely exemplary and illustrative of the disclosed embodiments and is not intended to limit the scope of the invention as defined solely by the claims.
Any numerical range recited herein is intended to include all sub-ranges subsumed therein. For example, a range of “1 to 10” or “from 1 to 10” is intended to include all sub-ranges between (and including) the recited minimum value of 1 and the recited maximum value of 10, that is, having a minimum value equal to or greater than 1 and a maximum value of equal to or less than 10. Any maximum numerical limitation recited herein is intended to include all lower numerical limitations subsumed therein and any minimum numerical limitation recited herein is intended to include all higher numerical limitations subsumed therein. Accordingly, Applicants reserve the right to amend the present disclosure, including the claims, to expressly recite any sub-range subsumed within the ranges expressly recited herein. All such ranges are intended to be inherently disclosed herein such that amending to expressly recite any such sub-ranges would comply with the requirements of 35 U.S.C. §112, first paragraph, and 35 U.S.C. §132(a).
The grammatical articles “one”, “a”, “an”, and “the”, as used herein, are intended to include “at least one” or “one or more”, unless otherwise indicated. Thus, the articles are used herein to refer to one or more than one (i.e., to at least one) of the grammatical objects of the article. By way of example, “a component” means one or more components, and thus, possibly, more than one component is contemplated and may be employed or used in an implementation of the described embodiments.
All percentages and ratios are calculated based on the total weight of the particular metallic material composition, unless otherwise indicated.
Any patent, publication, or other disclosure material that is said to be incorporated, in whole or in part, by reference herein is incorporated herein only to the extent that the incorporated material does not conflict with existing definitions, statements, or other disclosure material set forth in this disclosure. As such, and to the extent necessary, the disclosure as set forth herein supersedes any conflicting material incorporated herein by reference. Any material, or portion thereof, that is said to be incorporated by reference herein, but which conflicts with existing definitions, statements, or other disclosure material set forth herein is only incorporated to the extent that no conflict arises between that incorporated material and the existing disclosure material.
The present disclosure includes descriptions of various embodiments. It is to be understood that all embodiments described herein are exemplary, illustrative, and non-limiting. Thus, the invention is not limited by the description of the various exemplary, illustrative, and non-limiting embodiments. Rather, the invention is defined solely by the claims, which may be amended to recite any features expressly or inherently described in or otherwise expressly or inherently supported by the present disclosure.
As used herein, the term “metallic material” refers to metals, such as commercially pure metals, and metal alloys.
As used herein, the terms “cogging”, “forging”, and “open die press forging” refer to forms of thermomechanical processing (“TMP”), which also may be referred to herein as “thermomechanical working”. “Thermomechanical working” is defined herein as generally covering a variety of metallic material forming processes combining controlled thermal and deformation treatments to obtain synergistic effects, such as, for example, and without limitation, improvement in strength, without loss of toughness. This definition of thermomechanical working is consistent with the meaning ascribed in, for example, ASM Materials Engineering Dictionary, J. R. Davis, ed., ASM International (1992), p. 480. As used herein, the term “open die press forging” refers to the forging of metallic material between dies, in which the material flow is not completely restricted, by mechanical or hydraulic pressure, accompanied with a single work stroke of the press for each die session. This definition of open die press forging is consistent with the meaning ascribed in, for example, ASM Materials Engineering Dictionary, J. R. Davis, ed., ASM International (1992), pp. 298 and 343. As used herein, the term “cogging” refers to a thermomechanical reducing process used to improve or refine the grains of a metallic material, while working an ingot into a billet. This definition of cogging is consistent with the meaning ascribed in, for example, ASM Materials Engineering Dictionary, J. R. Davis, ed., ASM International (1992), p. 79.
As used herein, the term “billet” refers to a solid semifinished round or square product that has been hot worked by forging, rolling, or extrusion. This definition of billet is consistent with the meaning ascribed in, for example, ASM Materials Engineering Dictionary, J. R. Davis, ed., ASM International (1992), p. 40. As used herein, the term “bar” refers to a solid section forged from a billet to a form, such as round, hexagonal, octagonal, square, or rectangular, with sharp or rounded edges, and is long in relationship to its cross-sectional dimensions, having a symmetrical cross-section. This definition of bar is consistent with the meaning ascribed in, for example, ASM Materials Engineering Dictionary, J. R. Davis, ed., ASM International (1992), p. 32.
As used herein, the term “ductility limit” refers to the limit or maximum amount of reduction or plastic deformation a metallic material can withstand without fracturing or cracking. This definition is consistent with the meaning ascribed in, for example, ASM Materials Engineering Dictionary, J. R. Davis, ed., ASM International (1992), p 131. As used herein, the term “reduction ductility limit” refers to the amount or degree of reduction that a metallic material can withstand before cracking or fracturing.
As used herein, the phrases “initiate microstructure refinement” and “strain threshold for microstructure refinement initiation” refer to imparting strain in the microstructure of a metallic material to produce a buildup of disorientation (e.g., dislocations and sub-boundaries) in the crystal structure and/or second phase particles that results in a reduction of the material's grain size. Strain is imparted to metallic materials during the practice of non-limiting embodiments of methods of the present disclosure, or during subsequent thermomechanical processing steps. In substantially single-phase nickel-base or titanium-base alloys (at least 90% of γ phase in nickel or β phase in titanium) the strain threshold for microstructure refinement initiation refers to the nucleation of the first recrystallized grains. It can be estimated from a stress-strain curve measured at the temperature and strain rates of interest through uniaxial compression or tension. It is usually in the order of 0.1 to 0.3 strain. When dual phase nickel-base and titanium-base alloys are forged, microstructure evolution is far more sluggish. For instance, the globularization of the secondary phase may not be achieved or even initiated in a single draw. The focus is then placed on the strain required to build up disorientation efficiently throughout the accumulation of multiple forging steps. Microstructure refinement refers then to the formation of small sub-grains increasingly disoriented from their parent grain or original orientation. This is tied to dynamic recovery (accumulation of dislocations into sub-boundaries), the effect of which can also be seen on stress-strain curves in the form of flow softening. Similar threshold values of 0.1 to 0.3 are usually obtained and may be used as a qualitative estimate of strain threshold that needs to be reached at every draw or forge operation. Promoting disorientation build up during a draw increases the probability that sub-grains will disorient even more after rotation for the next draw instead of bringing their orientation back to that of their parent grain.
According to an aspect of a method of split pass open die forging according to the present disclosure, split pass open die forging relies on precisely controlling the amount of strain imparted to the workpiece at every pass to limit cracking of the workpiece. If insufficient reduction is taken in a given forging direction to initiate the microstructure refinement process in that given direction, open die press forging is repeated on the same face, in the same direction, up to the reduction ductility limit of the metallic material being forged, until sufficient reduction has been imparted in that direction to initiate microstructure refinement.
If the desirable amount of reduction to be imparted to a workpiece at any pass to initiate microstructure refinement exceeds the maximum amount of reduction that can be taken in one draw forging pass without too much material cracking, i.e., the amount of reduction exceeds the material's reduction ductility limit, then the reduction pass should be split into two or more passes so that 1) the strain imparted in any pass is less than the reduction ductility limit of the material at the forging temperature, and 2) the total strain imparted in one forging direction is sufficient to initiate satisfactory microstructure refinement. Only after imparting sufficient strain to drive microstructure evolution and initiate microstructure refinement in the one direction should the workpiece be rotated for forging for the next reduction pass, in a second direction.
Referring to
εf=ln(A0/Af) Equation (1):
After open die press forging 102 the metallic material workpiece at a forging temperature in a first forging direction up to a reduction ductility limit of the metallic material, the workpiece is open die press forged up to the reduction ductility limit of the metallic material 104 one or more times at the forging temperature in the first forging direction until a total amount of strain in the first forging direction is sufficient to initiate microstructure refinement. The workpiece is then rotated 106 a desired degree of rotation in preparation for the next forging pass.
It will be recognized that a desired degree of rotation is determined by the geometry of the workpiece. For example, a workpiece in the shape of an octagonal cylinder may be forged on any face, then rotated 90° and forged, then rotated 45° and forged, and then rotated 90° and forged. To eliminate swelling of sides of the octagonal cylinder, the octagonal cylinder may be planished by rotating 45° and planishing, then rotating 90° and planishing, then rotating 45° and planishing, and then rotating 90° and planishing. As will be understood by those having ordinary skill, the term “planish” and its forms, as used herein, refer to smoothing, planning, or finishing a surface of a metallic material workpiece by applying light open-die press forging strokes to surfaces of the metallic workpiece to bring the workpiece (e.g., a billet or bar) to the desired configuration and dimensions. An ordinarily skilled practitioner may readily determine the desired degree of rotations for workpieces having any particular cross-sectional shapes, such as, for example, round, square, or rectangular cross-sectional shapes.
After rotating 106 the metallic material workpiece a desired degree of rotation, the workpiece is open die press forged 108 at the forging temperature in a second forging direction to the reduction ductility limit of the metallic material. Open die press forging of the workpiece is repeated 110 up to the reduction ductility limit one or more times at the forging temperature in the second forging direction until a total amount of strain in the second forging direction is sufficient to initiate microstructure refinement in the metallic material.
Steps of rotating, open die forging, and repeating open die forging are repeated 112 in a third and, optionally, one or more additional directions until all faces have been forged to a size such that a total amount of strain that is sufficient to initiate microstructure refinement is imparted in the entire volume, or throughout the workpiece. For each of third and one or more additional directions in which microstructure refinement needs to be activated at that point in the process, open die press forging is repeated up to the reduction ductility limit and the workpiece is not rotated until a sufficient amount of strain is imparted in that specific direction. And for each of the third and one or more additional directions in which only shape control or planish is needed, open die press forging is performed only up to the reduction ductility limit. An ordinarily skilled practitioner, on reading the present description, may readily determine the desired degrees of rotation and the number of forging directions required for working a specific workpiece geometry using the methods described herein.
Embodiments of methods according to the present disclosure differ from, for example, working methods applying strain to form a slab from workpiece having a round or octagonal cross-section. For example, instead of continuing working to provide a flat product, edging only to control width, in non-limiting embodiments according to the present disclosure similar repeated passes are taken on additional sides of the workpiece to maintain a somewhat isotropic shape, that does not deviate substantially from the target final shape, which may be, for example, a rectangular, square, round, or octagonal billet or bar.
In cases when large redundant strain must be imparted, the drawing method according to the present disclosure can be combined with upsets. Multiple upsets and draws rely on repeating a pattern of recurring shapes and sizes. A particular embodiment of the invention involves a hybrid of an octagon and an RCS cross-section that aims to maximize the strain imparted on two axes during the draws, alternating the directions of the faces and diagonals at every upset-and-draw cycle. This non-limiting embodiment emulates the way in which strain is imparted in cube-like MAF samples, while allowing scale-up to industrial sizes.
Accordingly, as shown in
In one non-limiting exemplary calculation of the hybrid octagon-RCS shape, an upset reduction of U (or as a percentage (100X U)) is considered. After an upset forging of U reduction, the diagonal size becomes:
Then, the reduction from new diagonal to face is defined as R, and:
Rearranging gives:
After upset, the size between the main faces is:
So the reduction on faces to become the new diagonal is:
This implies that for reduction r to be defined (positive), U must be greater than or equal to R. In the case where U=R, in theory, no work would be needed on the faces to become the new diagonals. In practice, however, forging will result in some swell in the faces, and forging will be needed.
Using these equations, a non-limiting embodiment according to the present disclosure considers the situation in which D=24 inch, U=26%, and R=25%.
This gives:
Then the diagonal dimension is:
However, part of the reduction work on the diagonals swells onto the faces, so the reduction put to form and control the size of the new diagonals actually must be greater than 1.3%. The forging schedule needed to control the faces is simply defined as a few passes to limit swelling and control the size of new diagonals.
A non-limiting example of split pass open die forging 300 is schematically illustrated in
After upset forging, the workpiece is rotated (arrow 308) for open die drawing on a first diagonal face (X′ direction), and specifically in the present embodiment is rotated (arrow 308) to the 45 degree diagonal face for draw forging. The workpiece is then multiple pass draw forged (arrow 310) on the diagonal face to the strain threshold for microstructure refinement initiation without passing the reduction ductility limit. Each multiple pass draw forging step comprises at least two open press draw forging steps with reductions up to the reduction ductility limit of the metallic material.
Referring to
Referring to
After upset forging, the workpiece is rotated (arrow 324) for open die drawing on a first RCS face, and specifically in the present embodiment is rotated (arrow 324) to the 180 degree diagonal face (first RCS face; Y direction) for draw forging. The workpiece is then multiple pass draw forged (arrow 326) on the first RCS face to the strain threshold for microstructure refinement initiation. Each multiple pass draw forging step comprises at least two open press draw forging steps with reductions up to the reduction ductility limit of the metallic material.
Referring to
Referring to
It is known that Vee dies naturally create significant lateral swell on the first pass of a reduction. A non-limiting embodiment of a split pass method includes after a 90° rotation, the reduction is made to the original size first, and only then takes the reduction. For example, going form 20 inch to 16 inch with a maximum pass of 2 inch, one may take a reduction to 18 inch on the first side, then rotate 90° and take a reduction to 20 inch to control the swell, then take another reduction on the same side to 18 inch, and then again another reduction to 16 inch. The workpiece is rotate 90° and a reduction to 18 inch is made to control the swell, and then a new reduction to 16 inch. The workpiece is rotated 90° and a reduction to 18 inch is taken to control the swell, and then again to 16 inch as a new reduction. At that pint a couple of rotations associated with planish and passes to 16 inch should complete a process that insures that no more than a 2 inch reduction is taken at any pass.
According to an aspect of the present disclosure, the metallic material processed according to non-limiting embodiments herein comprises one of a titanium alloy and a nickel alloy. In certain non-limiting embodiments, the metallic material comprises a nickel-base superalloy, such as, for example, one of Waspaloy® (UNS N07001), ATI 718Plus® alloy (UNS N07818), and Alloy 720 (UNS N07720). In certain non-limiting embodiments, the metallic material comprises a titanium alloy, or one of an alpha-beta titanium alloy and a metastable-beta titanium alloy. In non-limiting embodiments, an alpha-beta titanium alloy processed by embodiments of the methods disclosed herein comprises one of a Ti-6Al-4V alloy (UNS R56400), a Ti-6Al-4V ELI alloy (UNS R56401), a Ti-6Al-2Sn-4Zr-6Mo alloy (UNS R56260), a Ti-6Al-2Sn-4Zr-2Mo alloy (UNS R54620), a Ti-10V-2Fe-3Al alloy (AMS 4986) and a Ti-4Al-2.5V-1.5Fe alloy (UNS 54250).
In a non-limiting embodiment according to the split pass forging methods of the present disclosure, open die press forging comprises forging at a forging temperature that is within a temperature range spanning 1100° F. up to a temperature 50° F. below a beta-transus temperature of the alpha-beta titanium alloy. In another non-limiting embodiment, a method according to present disclosure further comprises one of reheating or annealing the workpiece intermediate any open die press forging steps.
It will be recognized that it is within the scope of the methods of the present disclosure to reheat the workpiece intermediate any open pass press forging steps. It will also be recognized that it is within the scope of the methods of the present disclosure to anneal the workpiece intermediate any open pass press forging steps. The specific details of reheating and annealing a metallic material are known or readily ascertainable to ordinarily skilled practitioners and therefore need not be specified herein.
The examples that follow are intended to further describe certain non-limiting embodiments, without restricting the scope of the present invention. Persons having ordinary skill in the art will appreciate that variations of the following examples are possible within the scope of the invention, which is defined solely by the claims.
A 24 inch octagonal billet comprising Ti-4Al-2.5V-1.5Fe alloy is heated to a forging temperature of 1600° F. A reduction ductility limit of the alloy at the forging temperature is estimated to be at least 2 inches per reduction and would not tolerate much more reduction in a repeated fashion without extensive cracking to be 2 inches per reduction. The billet is open die press forged in a first direction, on any face of the octagonal billet, to 22 inches. The billet is then open die press forged in the first direction to 20 inches. The billet is rotated 90° to a second direction for open die press forging. While the original octagonal billet dimension was 24 inches, due to swelling of alternate faces during forging in the first direction, the billet is open die press forged in the second direction to 24 inches. The billet is then open die press forged in the second direction two more times to 22 inches, and then to 20 inches. The billet is reheated to the forging temperature. The billet is rotated 45° and then is split pass forged 2 inches per reduction in the third forging direction to 24 inches, then to 22 inches, and then to 20 inches. The billet is rotated 90° and then is split pass forged 2 inches per reduction in another forging direction, according to the present disclosure, to 24 inches, then to 22 inches then to 20 inches.
The billet is next planished by the following steps: rotating the billet 45° and squaring the side to 20 inches using open die press forging; rotating the billet 90° and squaring the side to 20 inches using open die press forging; rotating the billet 45° and squaring the side to 20 inches using open die press forging; and rotating the billet 90° and squaring the side to 20 inches using open die press forging. This method ensures that no single pass imparts a change in dimension of more than 2 inches, which is the reduction ductility limit, while every total reduction in each desired direction is at least 4 inches, which corresponds to the strain threshold required to initiate microstructure refinement in the microstructure of the alloy.
As part of a sequence of multiple upsets and draws, the split pass die forging method of the present Example, the microstructure of the Ti-4Al-2.5V-1.5Fe alloy is comprised of globularized, or equiaxed, alpha-phase particles having an average grain size in the range of 1 μm to 5 μm.
A hybrid octagon-RCS billet of a metallic material comprising Ti-6Al-4V alloy is provided. The hybrid octagon-RCS shape is a 24 inch RCS with 27.5 inch diagonals forming an octagon. The length is defined to be no more than 3×24 inches or 72 inches, and in this example the billet is 70 inches in length. In order to initiate microstructure refinement, the billet is upset forged at 1600° F. to a 26 percent reduction. After the upset reduction, the billet is about 51 inches long and its hybrid octagon-RCS cross-section is about 27.9 inch×32 inch. The billet is to be draw forged by a reduction of the 32 inch diagonals back to 24 inch faces, which is an 8 inch reduction, or 25% of the diagonal height. In doing so, it is expected that the other diagonal would swell beyond 32 inch. In the present example, a reasonable estimate for the reduction ductility limit at a forging temperature in the range of 1600° F. is that no pass should exceed a 2.5 inch reduction. Because reductions from 32 inch to 24 inch on diagonals could not be imparted at once in open die press forging given that this exceeds the reduction ductility limit of the material, the split-pass method according to the present disclosure was employed for this specific non-limiting embodiment.
In order to forge the old diagonals down to being the new faces, the 32 inch high face is open press forged to 29.5 inch, and then open press forged to 27.0 inch. The hybrid octagon-RCS billet is rotated 90°, open die press forged to 30.5 inch, and then open die press forged to 28 inch. The hybrid octagon-RCS billet is then forged on the old faces to control the new diagonal size. The hybrid octagon-RCS billet is rotated 45° and open die press forged to 27 inch; and then rotated 90° and open die press forged to 27.25 inch. The hybrid octagon-RCS billet is open die press forged on the old diagonals so that they become the new faces by rotating the hybrid octagon-RCS billet by 45° and open die press forging to 25.5 inch, followed by open die press forging the same face to 23.25 inch. The hybrid octagon-RCS billet is rotated 90° and press forged to 28 inch, then open die press forged to 25.5 inch in another split pass, and then open die press forged to 23.25 in a further split pass on the same face. The hybrid octagon-RCS billet is rotated 90° and open die press forged to 24 inch, and then rotated 90° and forged to 24 inch. Finally, the new diagonals of the hybrid octagon-RCS billet are planished by rotating the hybrid octagon-RCS billet 45° and open die press forged to 27.25 inch, followed by rotating the hybrid octagon-RCS billet 90° and open die press forging to 27.5 inch.
As part of a sequence of multiple upsets and draws the split pass die forging method of the present Example, the microstructure of the Ti-6Al-4V alloy is comprised of globularized, or equiaxed, alpha-phase particles having an average grain size in the range of 1 μm to 5 μm.
It will be understood that the present description illustrates those aspects of the invention relevant to a clear understanding of the invention. Certain aspects that would be apparent to those of ordinary skill in the art and that, therefore, would not facilitate a better understanding of the invention have not been presented in order to simplify the present description. Although only a limited number of embodiments of the present invention are necessarily described herein, one of ordinary skill in the art will, upon considering the foregoing description, recognize that many modifications and variations of the invention may be employed. All such variations and modifications of the invention are intended to be covered by the foregoing description and the following claims.
This invention was made with United States government support under NIST Contract Number 70NANB7H7038, awarded by the National Institute of Standards and Technology (NIST), United States Department of Commerce. The United States government may have certain rights in the invention.
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Number | Date | Country | |
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20140260492 A1 | Sep 2014 | US |