Understanding the role of Ca segregation on thermal stability, electrical resistivity and mechanical strength of nanostructured aluminum
Xavier Sauvage (GPM), Fabien Cuvilly (GPM), Alan Russell (ISU), Kaveh, Edalati (WPI-I2CNER)

TL;DR
This study investigates how calcium segregation influences the thermal stability, electrical resistivity, and mechanical strength of nanostructured aluminum, revealing that Ca segregation enhances strength but increases resistivity.
Contribution
It provides new insights into the effects of Ca segregation on nanostructured Al, demonstrating how it stabilizes grain boundaries and impacts electrical and mechanical properties.
Findings
Ca segregation increases mechanical strength beyond Hall-Petch predictions.
Electrical resistivity is significantly higher due to Ca segregation at grain boundaries.
Annealing reduces resistivity but it remains higher than pure nanostructured Al.
Abstract
Achieving a combination of high mechanical strength and high electrical conductivity in low-weight Al alloys requires a full understanding of the relationships between nanoscaled features and physical properties. Grain boundary strengthening through grain size reduction offers some interesting possibilities but is limited by thermal stability issues. Zener pinning by stable nanoscaled particles or grain boundary segregation are well-known strategies for stabilizing grain boundaries. In this study, the Al-Ca system has been selected to investigate the way segregation affects the combination of mechanical strength and electrical resistivity. For this purpose, an Al-Ca composite material was severely deformed by high-pressure torsion to achieve a nanoscaled structure with a mean grain size of only 25 nm. X-ray diffraction, transmission electron microscopy and atom probe tomography data…
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