AFRL Additive Manufacturing Modeling Series: Challenge 4, In Situ Mechanical Test of an IN625 Sample with Concurrent High-Energy Diffraction Microscopy Characterization

Author(s):  
David B. Menasche ◽  
William D. Musinski ◽  
Mark Obstalecki ◽  
Megna N. Shah ◽  
Sean P. Donegan ◽  
...  
Author(s):  
Michael G. Chapman ◽  
Megna N. Shah ◽  
Sean P. Donegan ◽  
J. Michael Scott ◽  
Paul A. Shade ◽  
...  

AbstractHigh-energy diffraction microscopy (HEDM) in-situ mechanical testing experiments offer unique insight into the evolving deformation state within polycrystalline materials. These experiments rely on a sophisticated analysis of the diffraction data to instantiate a 3D reconstruction of grains and other microstructural features associated with the test volume. For microstructures of engineering alloys that are highly twinned and contain numerous features around the estimated spatial resolution of HEDM reconstructions, the accuracy of the reconstructed microstructure is not known. In this study, we address this uncertainty by characterizing the same HEDM sample volume using destructive serial sectioning (SS) that has higher spatial resolution. The SS experiment was performed on an Inconel 625 alloy sample that had undergone HEDM in-situ mechanical testing to a small amount of plastic strain (~ 0.7%), which was part of the Air Force Research Laboratory Additive Manufacturing (AM) Modeling Series. A custom-built automated multi-modal SS system was used to characterize the entire test volume, with a spatial resolution of approximately 1 µm. Epi-illumination optical microscopy images, backscattered electron images, and electron backscattered diffraction maps were collected on every section. All three data modes were utilized and custom data fusion protocols were developed for 3D reconstruction of the test volume. The grain data were homogenized and downsampled to 2 µm as input for Challenge 4 of the AM Modeling Series, which is available at the Materials Data Facility repository.


2016 ◽  
Vol 5 (1) ◽  
pp. 94-102 ◽  
Author(s):  
Todd J. Turner ◽  
Paul A. Shade ◽  
Joel V. Bernier ◽  
Shiu Fai Li ◽  
Jay C. Schuren ◽  
...  

2012 ◽  
Vol 715-716 ◽  
pp. 447-454 ◽  
Author(s):  
C. M. Hefferan ◽  
S. F. Li ◽  
J. Lind ◽  
Ulrich Lienert ◽  
Anthony D. Rollett ◽  
...  

We have used high energy x-ray diffraction microscopy (HEDM) to study annealing behavior in high purity aluminum. In-situ measurements were carried out at Sector 1 of the Advanced Photon Source. The microstructure in a small sub-volume of a 1 mm diameter wire was mapped in the as-received state and after two differential anneals. Forward modeling analysis reveals three dimensional grain structures and internal orientation distributions inside grains. The analysis demonstrates increased ordering with annealing as well as persistent low angle internal boundaries. Grains that grow from disordered regions are resolution limited single crystals. Together with this recovery behavior, we observe subtle motions of some grain boundaries due to annealing.


2014 ◽  
Vol 47 (3) ◽  
pp. 887-898 ◽  
Author(s):  
Darren C. Pagan ◽  
Matthew P. Miller

A forward modeling diffraction framework is introduced and employed to identify slip system activity in high-energy diffraction microscopy (HEDM) experiments. In the framework, diffraction simulations are conducted on virtual mosaic crystals with orientation gradients consistent with Nye's model of heterogeneous single slip. Simulated diffraction peaks are then compared against experimental measurements to identify slip system activity. Simulation results compared against diffraction data measuredin situfrom a silicon single-crystal specimen plastically deformed under single-slip conditions indicate that slip system activity can be identified during HEDM experiments.


2018 ◽  
Vol 155 ◽  
pp. 138-152 ◽  
Author(s):  
Leyun Wang ◽  
Zhonghe Huang ◽  
Huamiao Wang ◽  
Alireza Maldar ◽  
Sangbong Yi ◽  
...  

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