Microstructural Analysis of Spall Damage Nucleation and Growth in Multicrystalline Titanium

Author(s):  
Elizabeth V. Fortin ◽  
Andrew D. Brown ◽  
Leda Wayne ◽  
Pedro D. Peralta

Shock loading is a dynamic condition that can lead to material failure and deformation modes at the microstructural level such as cracking, void nucleation and growth, and spallation. Knowledge of shock loading and spall failure is of great benefit to understanding ballistic impact in military vehicles and armor, crash impacts in automobiles, space vehicles, and satellite loadings, and geological events such as earthquakes. Furthermore, studying material failure at the microstructural level is important to understand macroscale behavior. Spallation, the nucleation, growth, and coalescence of voids, is a phenomenon where variability at the microscale can affect overall response. By analyzing incipient and intermediate damage patterns at and around interfaces and boundaries on the microstructural level, can help further our understanding of the process leading to damage and provide insight on how to develop stronger structures that can withstand impacts and rapid crack propagation. Most of the existing work has looked into the effect of grain boundaries in spall damage for body and face centered cubic (BCC, FCC) materials, but research is still lacking on grain boundary effects in spall damage in hexagonal close packed materials, such as titanium. Samples of high purity Ti were heat treated to obtain large grains, averaging 250 microns in size (multicrystals), in order to isolate grain boundary effects. These multicrystals were shocked using laser-launched flyer plates at the Trident laser at Los Alamos National Laboratory (LANL) and monitored using a velocity interferometry system for any reflector (VISAR). Pressures used were 5–8 GPa. Samples were soft recovered and cross-sectioned to perform quantitative characterization of damage. Spallation damage observed in the titanium targets was characterized using electron backscattering diffraction (EBSD), optical microscopy, and scanning electron microscopy (SEM) to gather information on the crystallographic characteristics of damage nucleation sites, with emphasis on grain boundaries and grain orientations that lead to damage localization. Initial results show that damage localized along grain boundaries, and the damage mode switched from intergranular to transgranular where grains were larger than average.

1988 ◽  
Vol 3 (4) ◽  
pp. 605-609 ◽  
Author(s):  
G. G. Peterson ◽  
B. R. Weinberger ◽  
L. Lynds ◽  
H. A. Krasinski

X-ray photoelectron spectroscopy, scanning Auger, and optical microscopy studies of polycrystalline superconducting pellets of Y–Ba–Cu–O/Ag are presented. Silver-laced samples have a lower porosity and a drastically reduced hydrocarbon contamination. Results indicate no detectable substitution of A g into the Y–Ba–Cu–O but a collection of metallic silver in voids and possibly along grain boundaries Intergranular silver could mitigate adverse grain boundary effects in polycrystalline Y–Ba–Cu–O.


1981 ◽  
Vol 5 ◽  
Author(s):  
V. J. Rao ◽  
W. A. Anderson ◽  
F. Kai

ABSTRACTGrain boundaries in Wacker poly-Si are shown to contribute mid-gap interface states, a greater frequency dependence in a.c. conductance, and lesser frequency dependence in capacitance. H-passivation was shown to be effective in reducing grain boundary effects as evidenced by 4-point probe resistance and IR studies.


2013 ◽  
Vol 577-578 ◽  
pp. 613-616
Author(s):  
Mei Zhen Xiang ◽  
Hai Bo Hu ◽  
Jun Chen

The mechanisms of spalling and melting in nanocrystalline Pb under shock loading are studied by molecular dynamics simulations. Our results show that grain boundaries have significant influences on spalling behaviors in cases of classical spallation and releasing melting. In these cases, cavitation and melting both start on grain boundaries, and they display mutual promotion: melting makes the voids nucleate at smaller tensile stress, and void growth speeds melting. Due to grain boundary effects, the spall strength of nanocrystalline Pb varies slowly with the shock intensity in cases of classical spallation. In cases of releasing melting and compression melting, spall strength of both single-crystalline and nanocrystalline Pb drops dramatically as shock intensity increases.


2006 ◽  
Vol 26 (14) ◽  
pp. 2855-2859 ◽  
Author(s):  
Jan Petzelt ◽  
Tetyana Ostapchuk ◽  
Ivan Gregora ◽  
Maxim Savinov ◽  
Dagmar Chvostova ◽  
...  

2000 ◽  
Vol 650 ◽  
Author(s):  
S. L. Dudarev

ABSTRACTThe effect of inhomogeneous nucleation and growth of cavities near grain boundaries illustrates the failure of the standard rate theory to describe the kinetics of phase transformations in irradiated materials under cascade damage conditions. The enhanced swelling observed near grain boundaries is believed to result from the competition between the diffusional growth of cavities and their shrinkage due to the interaction with mobile interstitial clusters. Swelling rates associated with the two processes behave in a radically different way as a function of the size of growing cavities. For a spatially homogeneous distribution of cavities this gives rise to the saturation of swelling in the limit of large irradiation doses.We investigate the evolution of the population of cavities nucleating and growing near a planar grain boundary. We show that a cavity growing near the boundary is able to reach a size that is substantially larger than the size of a cavity growing in the interior region of the grain. For a planar grain boundary the magnitude of swelling at maximum is found to be up to eight times higher than the magnitude of swelling in the grain interior.


Ionics ◽  
2010 ◽  
Vol 17 (1) ◽  
pp. 69-74 ◽  
Author(s):  
Rajeev Joshi ◽  
Ratikant Mishra ◽  
C. A. Betty ◽  
Shilpa Sawant ◽  
S. H. Pawar

1990 ◽  
Vol 51 (C1) ◽  
pp. C1-1035-C1-1042 ◽  
Author(s):  
J. SABRAS ◽  
C. DOLIN ◽  
J. AYACHE ◽  
C. MONTY ◽  
R. MAURY ◽  
...  

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