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Microstructure and tensile performance evolution during Titanium - 6 Aluminium - 4 Vanadium (Ti-6Al-4V) temporary hydrogen treatment

This thesis uses temporary hydrogen treatment to refine the cast Ti-6Al-4V microstructure in order to optimise its mechanical properties. It investigates the influence of hydrogen on microstructure evolution, grain refinement and tensile performance. It exposes the unarticulated relationship between...

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Main Author: Vilane, Velile
Other Authors: Knutsen, Robert Douglas
Format: Thesis
Language:English
Published: Department of Mechanical Engineering 2023
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access_status_str Open Access
author Vilane, Velile
author2 Knutsen, Robert Douglas
author_browse Knutsen, Robert Douglas
Vilane, Velile
author_facet Knutsen, Robert Douglas
Vilane, Velile
author_sort Vilane, Velile
collection Thesis
description This thesis uses temporary hydrogen treatment to refine the cast Ti-6Al-4V microstructure in order to optimise its mechanical properties. It investigates the influence of hydrogen on microstructure evolution, grain refinement and tensile performance. It exposes the unarticulated relationship between hydrogen and titanium aluminide (Ti3Al) as a gap in literature that has been sustained by the pervasive use of the repeated nucleation framework. It hypothesises that grain refinement of Ti-6Al-4V by temporary hydrogen alloying can cause embrittling effects which remain even when hydrogen is fully expelled from the alloy. It also hypothesises that the hydrogenation-disproportionation-desorption-recombination (HDDR) framework can account for the evolution of grain refinement in hydrogen treated Ti-6Al-4V. This thesis demonstrates that HDDR accounts for microstructure evolution in hydrogen treated Ti-6Al-4V and unveils the intimate relationship between hydrogen and Ti3Al. Cast Ti-6Al-4V was refined using hydrogenation-dehydrogenation (HDH), thermohydrogen processing (THP) and thermohydrogen and deformation processing (THDP). Cast Ti-6Al-4V was hydrogenated to 20 at.%H and subsequently dehydrogenated at 675⁰C (HDH 675), 700⁰C (HDH 700), 725⁰C (HDH 725) and 750⁰C (HDH 750). Hydrogenated Ti-6Al-4V was solution treated (at 900⁰C), aged (at 580⁰C) and dehydrogenated (at 675⁰C or 750⁰C) during THP treatment. The THDP treatment had a similar processing protocol to the latter, but it incorporated hot deformation (to 1.6 true strain), recrystallisation (at 900⁰C) and quenching before aging. Microstructure evolution was characterised by X-ray diffraction, electron backscatter diffraction, transmission Kikuchi diffaction and transmission electron microscopy. Temporary hydrogen treatment causes submicron grain refinement. It improves the yield, tensile strength by up to 70 MPa, 100 MPa (in HDH) or 130 MPa, 142 MPa (in THP) treated Ti- 6Al-4V. Hydrogen precipitates Ti-H and Ti-H2 hydrides which partition Al from its Ti-Al couple. This forms Al rich clusters in neighbouring regions where the degree of Al enrichment stabilises Ti3Al precipitates. Dehydrogenating at 675⁰C decomposes hydrides but it retains the Ti3Al precipitates which deteriorate tensile ductility by up to 75% (in HDH treated microstructures). Dehydrogenating at 750⁰C significantly dissolves Ti3Al to extents that retain full ductility (in HDH) and restores 20% ductility (in THP) treated microstructures.
format Thesis
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institution University of Cape Town (South Africa)
language eng
last_indexed 2026-06-10T12:32:58.612Z
license_str Not specified — see source repository
provenance_str_mv Harvested via OAI-PMH from UCTD — University of Cape Town Open Access Repository
publishDate 2023
publishDateRange 2023
publishDateSort 2023
publisher Department of Mechanical Engineering
publisherStr Department of Mechanical Engineering
record_format dspace
source_str UCTD — University of Cape Town Open Access Repository
spelling oai:open.uct.ac.za:11427/37448 Microstructure and tensile performance evolution during Titanium - 6 Aluminium - 4 Vanadium (Ti-6Al-4V) temporary hydrogen treatment Vilane, Velile Knutsen, Robert Douglas Westraadt, Johan Materials Engineering This thesis uses temporary hydrogen treatment to refine the cast Ti-6Al-4V microstructure in order to optimise its mechanical properties. It investigates the influence of hydrogen on microstructure evolution, grain refinement and tensile performance. It exposes the unarticulated relationship between hydrogen and titanium aluminide (Ti3Al) as a gap in literature that has been sustained by the pervasive use of the repeated nucleation framework. It hypothesises that grain refinement of Ti-6Al-4V by temporary hydrogen alloying can cause embrittling effects which remain even when hydrogen is fully expelled from the alloy. It also hypothesises that the hydrogenation-disproportionation-desorption-recombination (HDDR) framework can account for the evolution of grain refinement in hydrogen treated Ti-6Al-4V. This thesis demonstrates that HDDR accounts for microstructure evolution in hydrogen treated Ti-6Al-4V and unveils the intimate relationship between hydrogen and Ti3Al. Cast Ti-6Al-4V was refined using hydrogenation-dehydrogenation (HDH), thermohydrogen processing (THP) and thermohydrogen and deformation processing (THDP). Cast Ti-6Al-4V was hydrogenated to 20 at.%H and subsequently dehydrogenated at 675⁰C (HDH 675), 700⁰C (HDH 700), 725⁰C (HDH 725) and 750⁰C (HDH 750). Hydrogenated Ti-6Al-4V was solution treated (at 900⁰C), aged (at 580⁰C) and dehydrogenated (at 675⁰C or 750⁰C) during THP treatment. The THDP treatment had a similar processing protocol to the latter, but it incorporated hot deformation (to 1.6 true strain), recrystallisation (at 900⁰C) and quenching before aging. Microstructure evolution was characterised by X-ray diffraction, electron backscatter diffraction, transmission Kikuchi diffaction and transmission electron microscopy. Temporary hydrogen treatment causes submicron grain refinement. It improves the yield, tensile strength by up to 70 MPa, 100 MPa (in HDH) or 130 MPa, 142 MPa (in THP) treated Ti- 6Al-4V. Hydrogen precipitates Ti-H and Ti-H2 hydrides which partition Al from its Ti-Al couple. This forms Al rich clusters in neighbouring regions where the degree of Al enrichment stabilises Ti3Al precipitates. Dehydrogenating at 675⁰C decomposes hydrides but it retains the Ti3Al precipitates which deteriorate tensile ductility by up to 75% (in HDH treated microstructures). Dehydrogenating at 750⁰C significantly dissolves Ti3Al to extents that retain full ductility (in HDH) and restores 20% ductility (in THP) treated microstructures. 2023-03-14T11:31:16Z 2023-03-14T11:31:16Z 2019 2022-11-23T08:35:04Z Doctoral Thesis Doctoral PhD http://hdl.handle.net/11427/37448 eng application/pdf Department of Mechanical Engineering Faculty of Engineering and the Built Environment
spellingShingle Materials Engineering
Vilane, Velile
Microstructure and tensile performance evolution during Titanium - 6 Aluminium - 4 Vanadium (Ti-6Al-4V) temporary hydrogen treatment
thesis_degree_str Doctoral
title Microstructure and tensile performance evolution during Titanium - 6 Aluminium - 4 Vanadium (Ti-6Al-4V) temporary hydrogen treatment
title_full Microstructure and tensile performance evolution during Titanium - 6 Aluminium - 4 Vanadium (Ti-6Al-4V) temporary hydrogen treatment
title_fullStr Microstructure and tensile performance evolution during Titanium - 6 Aluminium - 4 Vanadium (Ti-6Al-4V) temporary hydrogen treatment
title_full_unstemmed Microstructure and tensile performance evolution during Titanium - 6 Aluminium - 4 Vanadium (Ti-6Al-4V) temporary hydrogen treatment
title_short Microstructure and tensile performance evolution during Titanium - 6 Aluminium - 4 Vanadium (Ti-6Al-4V) temporary hydrogen treatment
title_sort microstructure and tensile performance evolution during titanium 6 aluminium 4 vanadium ti 6al 4v temporary hydrogen treatment
topic Materials Engineering
url http://hdl.handle.net/11427/37448
work_keys_str_mv AT vilanevelile microstructureandtensileperformanceevolutionduringtitanium6aluminium4vanadiumti6al4vtemporaryhydrogentreatment