Abstract
Magnesium alloys have been finding increasingly more types of application in the
automotive and aerospace industries for over twenty years. Despite the fact conventional
magnesium alloys have limited high-temperature strength and creep resistance, especially when
they contain aluminium as an alloying element. Aluminium is necessary to improve the castability
when high-pressure die casting is the favoured process. Applications with higher operating
temperatures require additional alloy elements, which form precipitates with the aluminium during
solidification and therefore prevent the formation of Mg17Al12, which is responsible for the low
creep resistance of magnesium alloys that contain aluminium. The precipitates formed may also
strengthen grain boundaries and so improve the creep strength. Barium and calcium were
investigated as elements in a magnesium alloy containing aluminium (DieMag422: 4 wt.-% Al,
2 wt.-% Ba, 2 wt.-% Ca). The compression creep strength was compared at 240°C for stresses
between 60 and 120 MPa with two commercial creep-resistant magnesium alloys, AE42 and
MRI230D. The stress exponents were calculated from the stress dependence of the minimum creep
rate. The concept of a threshold stress was applied and true stress exponents nt close to 5 were
found. The new alloy DieMag422 exhibits improved creep strength compared to both commercial
alloys and also has proven it is die castable.