Tm. Yu et al., THE EFFECT OF COLD-WORKING AND ANNEALING PRACTICE ON EARING IN 3104 AL-ALLOY SHEET, Materials characterization, 30(4), 1993, pp. 251-259
A study was conducted with a 3104 Al alloy on the effect on earing of
five annealing and cold-rolling practices preceeding a final cold redu
ction of 88%. Included in these were the effect of slow heating (15-de
grees-C/h) to the annealing temperature of 332-degrees-C, which simula
ted batch annealing; and the effect of rapid heating (about 140-degree
s-C/min), which simulated strip annealing. The annealing time was 2 h.
The starting condition was hot-rolled material; some of the practices
involved an intermediate cold reduction of 35%. The tensile mechanica
l properties were independent of the test direction for the final 88%
cold-rolled material for all practices. The yield and tensile strength
s were slightly lower for practices involving the intermediate 35% col
d rolling. These practices also had markedly higher 45-degrees earing.
The rapid heating rate gave a finer annealed grain size, but the heat
ing rate had no effect (other steps of the processing being the same)
on the earing behavior. The primary particle density of the annealed c
ondition that preceded the final 88% cold rolling did not correlate wi
th the earing. It appears that the finer microstructural features prod
uced after the 35% cold rolling and annealing are responsible for the
high earing observed.