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Creators/Authors contains: "Figueiredo, Roberto B"

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  1. Advanced structural materials are expected to display significantly improved mechanical properties and this may be achieved, at least in part, by refining the grain size to the submicrometer or the nanocrystalline range. This report provides a detailed summary of the role of grain size in the mechanical properties of metals. The effect of grain size on the high temperature behavior and the development of superplasticity is illustrated using deformation mechanism maps and the development of exceptional strength through grain refinement hardening at low temperatures is also discussed. It is shown that the deformation mechanism of grain boundary sliding, as developed theoretically, can be used to effectively predict both the high and low temperature behavior of metals having different grain sizes. This analysis explains the increase in strain rate sensitivity in ultrafine-grained metals with low and moderate melting points and the ability to increase both the strength and ductility of these materials to thereby overcome the strength-ductility paradox. The recent development of hybrid materials is also reviewed and it is demonstrated that, although these hybrids have received only limited attention to date, they provide a potential for making significant advances in the production of new structural materials. 
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    Free, publicly-accessible full text available June 1, 2026
  2. Recovery plays distinct roles in nanostructured and coarse-grained metallic materials. While static and dynamic recovery usually soften work-hardened, coarse-grained materials, static recovery has been shown to strengthen nanostructured metals. This study extends this understanding by demonstrating that dynamic recovery can also strengthen nanostructured metals under deformation. Tensile, creep, and plane strain compression tests on nanostructured aluminum reveal a trend of increasing strain-hardening with decreasing strain rate and increasing temperature. Molecular dynamics simulations further indicate that sudden strain rate reductions lead to an initial drop in flow stress, followed by strain hardening. These findings suggest that dynamic recovery could serve as an effective strengthening mechanism for nanostructured metals, offering improvements in uniform elongation. 
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    Free, publicly-accessible full text available April 1, 2026
  3. Al-Mg alloy disks were produced from Mg sandwiched between Al through 100 turns of high-pressure torsion (HPT) at 6.0 GPa at room temperature, resulting in high microhardness of Hv 300–350 in regions experiencing a nominal shear strain >  ~ 390. While compositional mapping using scanning electron microscopy energy-dispersive spectroscopy (EDS) showed a uniform distribution of Mg through the disk thickness at 1.5 mm and 3.0 mm from the disk center, transmission electron microscopy EDS showed a heterogeneous distribution of Mg remained on the nanoscale. Although HPT induces enough mixing to result in face-center-cubic Al with supersaturations of Mg of up to ~ 20 at.% near the disk surfaces, β-Al3Mg2, γ-Al12Mg17 and Al2Mg intermetallic phases were identified by electron diffraction throughout the disk thickness even in regions experiencing high shear strain. This study visually captures detailed compositional heterogeneity throughout the sample thickness following intense mechanical alloying, nanoscale re-structuring and phase transformations. 
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    Free, publicly-accessible full text available March 1, 2026
  4. There has been a great interest in evaluating the potential of severe plastic deformation (SPD) to improve the performance of magnesium for biological applications. However, different properties and trends, including some contradictions, have been reported. The present study critically reviews the structural features, mechanical properties, corrosion behavior and biological response of magnesium and its alloys processed by SPD, with an emphasis on equal-channel angular pressing (ECAP) and high-pressure torsion (HPT). The unique mechanism of grain refinement in magnesium processed via ECAP causes a large scatter in the final structure, and these microstructural differences can affect the properties and produce difficulties in establishing trends. However, the recent advances in ECAP processing and the increased availability of data from samples produced via HPT clarify that grain refinement can indeed improve the mechanical properties and corrosion resistance without compromising the biological response. It is shown that processing via SPD has great potential for improving the performance of magnesium for biological applications. 
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    The processing of bulk metals through the application of severe plastic deformation (SPD), using procedures such as equal-channel angular pressing (ECAP) and high-pressure torsion (HPT), is now well established for the fabrication of materials with exceptionally small grain sizes, usually in the submicrometer range and often having grain sizes at the nanometer level. These grain sizes cannot be achieved using thermo-mechanical processing or any conventional processing techniques. Recently, these procedures have been further developed to process alternative advanced materials. For example, by stacking separate disks within the HPT facility for the synthesis of bulk nanocrystalline metastable alloys where it is possible to achieve exceptionally high hardness, or by pressing powders or metallic particles in order to obtain new and novel nanocomposites exhibiting unusual properties. 
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  7. Ultrafine-grained and heterostructured materials are currently of high interest due to their superior mechanical and functional properties. Severe plastic deformation (SPD) is one of the most effective methods to produce such materials with unique microstructure-property relationships. In this review paper, after summarizing the recent progress in developing various SPD methods for processing bulk, surface and powder of materials, the main structural and microstructural features of SPD-processed materials are explained including lattice defects, grain boundaries and phase transformations. The properties and potential applications of SPD-processed materials are then reviewed in detail including tensile properties, creep, superplasticity, hydrogen embrittlement resistance, electrical conductivity, magnetic properties, optical properties, solar energy harvesting, photocatalysis, electrocatalysis, hydrolysis, hydrogen storage, hydrogen production, CO2 conversion, corrosion resistance and biocompatibility. It is shown that achieving such properties is not currently limited to pure metals and conventional metallic alloys, and a wide range of materials are processed by SPD, including high-entropy alloys, glasses, semiconductors, ceramics and polymers. It is particularly emphasized that SPD has moved from a simple metal processing tool to a powerful means for the discovery and synthesis of new superfunctional metallic and nonmetallic materials. The article ends by declaring that the borders of SPD have been extended from materials science and it has become an interdisciplinary tool to address scientific questions such as the mechanism of geological and astronomical phenomena and the origin of life. Keywords: Severe plastic deformation (SPD); Nanostructured materials; Ultrafine grained (UFG) materials; Gradient-structured materials, High-pressure torsion (HPT) 
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