Samples of Cu–Al and Cu–Zn alloys with different compositions were subjected to large strains under plane-strain compression, a process that simulates the rolling operation. Four compositions in the Cu–Al system, namely 1, 2, 4.7 and 7wt%Al and three compositions in the Cu–Zn system of 10, 20 and 30wt%Zn, were investigated. Adding Al or Zn to Cu effectively lowers the stacking fault energy of the alloy and changed the deformation mechanism from dislocation slipping to dislocation slipping and deformation twinning. True stress–true strain responses in plane-strain compression were documented and the strain hardening rates were calculated and correlated to the evolved microstructure. The onset of twinning in low stacking fault energy alloys was not directly related to the low value of stacking fault energy, but rather to build up of a critical dislocation density during strain hardening in the early stage of deformation (ε < 0.1). The evolution of texture was documented for the Cu–Al samples using X-ray diffraction for samples plane strain compressed to true axial strains of 0.25, 0.5, 0.75 and 1.0. Orientation distribution function plots were generated and quantitative information on the volume fraction of ideal rolling orientations were depicted and correlated with the stacking fault energy.

Role of Stacking Fault Energy on the Deformation Characteristics of Copper Alloys Processed by Plane Strain Compression. E.A.El-Danaf, A.Al-Mutlaq, M.S.Soliman: Materials Science and Engineering A, 2011, 528[25-26], 7579-88