A Methodology to Assess the Spatial Distribution of Dispersoids in Al-Mg-Si Alloys

Canadian Institute of Mining, Metallurgy and Petroleum
M. S. Remøe I. Westermann K. Marthinsen
Organization:
Canadian Institute of Mining, Metallurgy and Petroleum
Pages:
11
File Size:
672 KB
Publication Date:
Jan 1, 2018

Abstract

"Al-Mg-Si alloys often add small additions of e.g. Mn or Cr, to form dispersoids, which may act as nucleation sites for Mg2Si particles after homogenization. The purpose is to ensure a high density of uniformly distributed small ?’-particles, which can be dissolved during further processing prior to the final age hardening step. However, their density and spatial distribution are critically dependent on the homogenization procedure. It is therefore important to have a robust and reliable method for assessing their spatial distribution. In the present work an existing methodology for assessing spatial uniformity, the Global Shannon Entropy (GSE), has been implemented and evaluated for different dispersoid structures characterized by scanning electron microscopy. This metric is highly dependent on the parameters used, but by careful selection of adequate parameters, it can be effective in detecting non-uniformity. An important weakness with the GSE was identified, and a modification to improve on the ability to differentiate degrees of non-uniformity is suggested. To evaluate the proposed methodology, the effect of heating rate on dispersoid precipitation behaviour during homogenisation of four Al-Mg-Si alloys with different Mn/Cr-content has been investigated. The metric with the new term has demonstrated promising results, and improved the ability to differentiate degrees of spatial uniformity.INTRODUCTION Al-Mg-Si series alloys are the most common aluminium extrusion alloys and are attractive for applications in a range of sectors (e.g. construction, automotive and recently also in consumer electronics), due to their generally good combination of strength, ductility and corrosion resistance. However, their extrudability and end properties depend critically on the alloy chemistry as well as prior processing conditions. Coarse ß-AlFeSi or Mg2Si-particles typically have a detrimental effect on extrudability, while small dispersoid particles may affect recrystallization, grain growth and precipitation of Mg and Si. The strengthening potential in the final age hardening step depends strongly on the amount of Mg and Si in solid solution after extrusion. The manner in which these particles are spatially distributed will decide whether the final product will exhibit uniform properties, and the number density and sizes will determine the extent of the effect. As such, these are important characteristics."
Citation

APA: M. S. Remøe I. Westermann K. Marthinsen  (2018)  A Methodology to Assess the Spatial Distribution of Dispersoids in Al-Mg-Si Alloys

MLA: M. S. Remøe I. Westermann K. Marthinsen A Methodology to Assess the Spatial Distribution of Dispersoids in Al-Mg-Si Alloys. Canadian Institute of Mining, Metallurgy and Petroleum, 2018.

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