Dependence of Tensile Ductility and Impact Toughness on Constituent Particles in 2014 Aluminum Alloy
Geng Chen, Fang Li, Sijun Chen, Songyi Chen, Kanghua ChenIn contemporary engineering applications, deficiencies in dynamic mechanical properties, particularly impact toughness, are the leading cause of fracture incidents. Consequently, inadequate dynamic mechanical properties have emerged as the primary constraint limiting the further commercial application of precipitation-strengthened high-strength aluminum (Al) alloys, exemplified by the 2014 aluminum alloy. Since the dynamic mechanical properties of the 2014 wrought aluminum alloy are fundamentally governed by the decohesion and cracking of coarse second-phase constituent particles, it is necessary to quantify the correlation between microstructure and mechanical properties. Meanwhile, the size and volume fraction of constituent particles are largely dictated by the concentration of main and impurity alloying elements. Experimental results revealed that the volume fraction of coarse constituents increased with increasing Cu, Si, and Fe content, and that tensile ductility and impact toughness decreased following an inverse exponential relationship with the volume fraction of constituents. The aim of this study is to establish a quantitative relation to correlate the characteristics of coarse constituents with the tensile ductility and impact toughness of the 2014 aluminum alloy. A mathematical model was developed by regarding the coarse constituents as ellipsoidal inclusions. Their volume fraction and aspect ratio were considered in the model. Model predictions show broad agreement with experimental data. These properties are more sensitive to the volume fraction when it is low. Conversely, a larger aspect ratio leads to higher ductility and toughness. The sensitivity is also greater at a small aspect ratio. The model further indicates that reducing the volume fraction when it is high yields limited improvement, whereas further reduction at a low volume fraction leads to significant enhancement of ductility and toughness. This study correlates coarse constituent characteristics with tensile ductility and impact toughness quantitatively, and provides a theoretical framework for predicting and optimizing the mechanical properties of 2014 aluminum alloy.