Orientation dependent pinning of (sub)grains by dispersoids during recovery and recrystallization in an Al–Mn alloy

The recrystallized grain size and texture in alloys can be controlled via the microchemistry state during thermomechanical processing. The influence of concurrent precipitation on recovery and recrystallization is here analyzed by directly correlating (sub)grains of P, CubeND and Cube orientation wi...

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Bibliographic Details
Published inActa materialia Vol. 248; p. 118761
Main Authors Ånes, Håkon W., van Helvoort, Antonius T.J., Marthinsen, Knut
Format Journal Article
LanguageEnglish
Published Elsevier Ltd 15.04.2023
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Summary:The recrystallized grain size and texture in alloys can be controlled via the microchemistry state during thermomechanical processing. The influence of concurrent precipitation on recovery and recrystallization is here analyzed by directly correlating (sub)grains of P, CubeND and Cube orientation with second-phase particles in a cold-rolled and non-isothermally annealed Al–Mn alloy. The recrystallized state is dominated by coarse elongated grains with a strong P, weaker CubeND and even weaker Cube texture. The correlated data enables orientation dependent quantification of density and size of dispersoids on sub-boundaries and of subgrains in the deformation zones around large constituent particles. A new modified expression for the Smith–Zener drag from dispersoids on sub-boundaries is derived and used. The results show that drag on (sub)grain boundaries from dispersoids is orientation dependent, with Cube subgrains experiencing the highest drag after recovery and partial recrystallization. The often-observed size advantage of Cube subgrains is not realized due to increased drag, thereby promoting particle-stimulated nucleation (PSN). Relatively fewer and larger dispersoids in deformation zones around large particles give a reduced drag on PSN nuclei, further strengthening PSN. Observations substantiating stronger P texture compared to CubeND texture are higher frequency of P subgrains and faster growth of these subgrains. The applied methodology enables a better understanding of the mechanisms behind the orientation dependent nucleation and growth behavior during recovery and recrystallization with strong concurrent precipitation in Al–Mn alloys. In particular, the methodology gives new insights into the strong P and CubeND textures compared to the Cube texture. [Display omitted] •A 95% cold-rolled and non-isothermally annealed Al–Mn alloy is investigated.•Correlated analysis of (sub)grains and dispersoids in the same reference frame.•Effects of concurrent precipitation of dispersoids on recovery and recrystallization.•Smith–Zener drag from dispersoids at subgrain boundaries, per texture component.•Insights into strong P/CubeND compared to Cube texture with concurrent precipitation.
ISSN:1359-6454
1873-2453
DOI:10.1016/j.actamat.2023.118761