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    Effect of High-Pressure Torsion and Natural Ageing on Hardness, Electrical Resistivity and Fatigue Properties of Commercially Pure Cu

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    Rijal, Ajay
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    Abstract
    Commercially pure Cu was processed through high-pressure torsion (HPT) at a pressure of 6 GPa starting from ¼ up to 50 turns. These samples were then naturally aged for 1.75 years under the laboratory condition. Subsequently, microhardness, electrical resistivity, and fatigue response of samples in bending were evaluated and correlated with microstructure. Grain size monotonically decreased with the number of HPT turns and became saturated at ~300 nm after an equivalent strain of ~40. Low-angle grain boundaries and sub-grains were formed at the onset of straining, which transformed into high angle grain boundaries upon further straining. Hardness of the freshly processed samples monotonically increased with the HPT strain and saturated at the value of 155 HV; however, the samples processed to a shear strain of 2 to 20 and naturally aged for 1.75 years demonstrated a remarkable drop in the hardness values. Interestingly, the natural ageing was not effective in changing the hardness of HPT processed samples strained up to very high shear strains. Electrical resistivity of the HPT processed samples after natural ageing as well as freshly prepared samples showed a non-monotonous variation with the HPT strain, wherein it increased and then decreased and finally again started to increase with increasing shear strain. Maximum increment in the resistivity was about ~27% as compared to an annealed Cu sample, whereas microhardness enhanced by ~ 240 %. On other hand, during fatigue testing, the area fraction of surface cracks increased monotonically with the stress in both annealed and HPT processed samples. Furthermore, HPT processed Cu samples showed lesser fraction of surface cracks at low stresses, which indicates that HPT process assisted suppression of the surface crack formation and growth of cracks during the initial stages. In all segments of the work, an overview of the observed properties, based on correlation with microstructure conducted using electron back-scattered diffraction and transmission electron microscopy, is provided
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    https://etd.iisc.ac.in/handle/2005/4572
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    • Materials Engineering (MatEng) [324]

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