Abstract
This study addresses the challenge of simultaneously improving the electrical conductivity and strength of aluminum alloys. We innovatively combine powder metallurgy with melt stirring casting to fabricate graphite flake-added aluminum matrix composites through secondary remelting, electromagnetic stirring, and extruding. The influence of graphite flake content gradient (0-3.0 wt.%) on the mechanical properties and electrical conductivity was systematically investigated. Our results demonstrate that the composite with 0.2 wt.% graphite flakes (sample GM02) exhibits optimal comprehensive performance: tensile strength reaches 100.9 MPa (a 124% increase over pure Al), and electrical conductivity reaches 67.1% IACS (a 9.6% increase). Microstructural analysis reveals that low-content graphite flakes effectively suppressed electron scattering by forming semi-coherent interfaces. However, when graphite flake content exceeds 0.5 wt.%, a significant decrease in conductivity and plasticity (elongation below 10%) occurs due to increased Al(4)C(3) phase formation, enhanced grain boundary scattering caused by grain refinement, and porosity defects induced by graphite flake agglomeration. This study provides a novel approach for the industrial production of high-performance, lightweight conductive components.