Stress Corrosion Cracking of Wrought and P/M High Strength Aluminum Alloys.
Abstract
The major findings from a comprehensive study on the role of microstructure on the susceptibility to environmental embrittlement of high strength aluminum alloys are presented and discussed. Most of the studies used commercial 7075, or a high purity equiaxed version, HP7075, or a similar powder version 7090. Through the innovative use of loading mode and straining electrode test, stress corrosion cracking was shown to be controlled by the introduction and internal distribution of hydrogen, particularly to grain boundaries. This was the case for the underaged and peak aged microstructures, with the latter being the most susceptible. The SCC behavior of the even more resistant overaged microstructure was shown to be controlled by anodic dissolution processes, predominantly associated with slip bands. Aluminum alloys were also shown to be susceptible to embrittlement under conditions of cathodic polarization correcting a widely held belief that concomitant anodic processes are required. Studies using controlled microstructures were able to rank the importance of different microstructural features to help develop alloy design strategies for more environmentally resistant alloys--the most effective features are those grain interior precipitates which promote fine, homogeneous slip either by reduced particle cutting or enhanced dislocation generation; fine, grain boundary precipitate free zones were found not to be very important, except in their role in reducing the local strength of the boundary region.
Document Details
- Document Type
- Technical Report
- Publication Date
- Sep 01, 1986
- Accession Number
- ADA174435
Entities
People
- A. W. Thompson
- I. M. Bernstein
Organizations
- Carnegie Mellon University