A study of interface sliding at F.C.C.-B.C.C. boundaries in a Cu-Zn alloy

Author(s):  
F. Monchoux ◽  
A. Rocher ◽  
J.L. Martin

Interphase sliding is an important phenomenon of high temperature plasticity. In order to study the microstructural changes associated with it, as well as its influence on the strain rate dependence on stress and temperature, plane boundaries were obtained by welding together two polycrystals of Cu-Zn alloys having the face centered cubic and body centered cubic structures respectively following the procedure described in (1). These specimens were then deformed in shear along the interface on a creep machine (2) at the same temperature as that of the diffusion treatment so as to avoid any precipitation. The present paper reports observations by conventional and high voltage electron microscopy of the microstructure of both phases, in the vicinity of the phase boundary, after different creep tests corresponding to various deformation conditions.Foils were cut by spark machining out of the bulk samples, 0.2 mm thick. They were then electropolished down to 0.1 mm, after which a hole with thin edges was made in an area including the boundary

MRS Bulletin ◽  
1997 ◽  
Vol 22 (7) ◽  
pp. 33-37 ◽  
Author(s):  
Tohru Suzuki

In 1916 a group of Russian chemists—Kurnakov and his colleagues—discovered that slowly cooled CuxAu1 − xmetal alloys had anomalously low electrical resistivities at simple compositions of CuAu and Cu3Au. Nine years later in 1925, Swedish physicists Johansson and Linde found by x-ray-diffraction experiments that the alloys had ordered structures on the face-centered-cubic lattice, now called CuAu I-type and AuCu3-type. Two years later, Johansson and Linde discovered CuPt-type ordering in Cu0.5Pt0.5 alloy by noticing a similar anomaly in their electrical-resistivity measurements for CuxPt1 − x. These were among the events at the dawn of physical metallurgy and study on order-disorder transformations. Many years later in 1985, the first observation of ordering in semiconductor alloys was made in AlGaAs grown on GaAs(110); the type was CuAu I. CuPt-type ordering was observed in SiGe grown on Si(001). Since the (110) orientation of the substrate for AlGaAs was clumsy for practical purposes and the degree of ordering in SiGe was extremely low, these phenomena seemed to have little relevance in practical applications. Other observations were made such as famatinite-type ordering in GalnAs and chalcopyrite-type ordering in GaAsSb. These observations however were quite rare, with only isolated cases reported.


2009 ◽  
Vol 18 (08) ◽  
pp. 1159-1173 ◽  
Author(s):  
CASEY MANN ◽  
JENNIFER MCLOUD-MANN ◽  
RAMONA RANALLI ◽  
NATHAN SMITH ◽  
BENJAMIN MCCARTY

This article concerns the minimal knotting number for several types of lattices, including the face-centered cubic lattice (fcc), two variations of the body-centered cubic lattice (bcc-14 and bcc-8), and simple-hexagonal lattices (sh). We find, through the use of a computer algorithm, that the minimal knotting number in sh is 20, in fcc is 15, in bcc-14 is 13, and bcc-8 is 18.


1976 ◽  
Vol 31 (12) ◽  
pp. 1539-1542 ◽  
Author(s):  
H. M. Ledbetter

Abstract The Poisson ratio υ of a polycrystalline aggregate was calculated for both the face-centered cubic and the body-centered cubic cases. A general two-body central-force interatomatic potential was used. Deviations of υ from 0.25 were verified. A lower value of υ is predicted for the f.c.c. case than for the b.c.c. case. Observed values of υ for twenty-three cubic elements are discussed in terms of the predicted values. Effects of including volume-dependent electron-energy terms in the inter-atomic potential are discussed.


2020 ◽  
Vol 512 ◽  
pp. 167013
Author(s):  
Yu Miao ◽  
Xiaorui Chen ◽  
Shuanglong Yang ◽  
Kun Zheng ◽  
Zhongyuan Lian ◽  
...  

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