PLASTIC ANISOTROPY OF TANTALUM, NIOBIUM, AND MOLYBDENUM

1967 ◽  
Vol 45 (2) ◽  
pp. 1075-1089 ◽  
Author(s):  
P. J. Sherwood ◽  
F. Guiu ◽  
H. C. Kim ◽  
P. L. Pratt

The stress–strain behavior of single crystals of tantalum, niobium, and molybdenum has been studied in both tension and compression in the temperature range 4.2–400 °K. The crystals were stressed in both the [Formula: see text] and the [Formula: see text] directions.At high temperatures, the yield stress of all three metals is independent of the direction and sense of the applied stress. At low temperatures, the yield stress depends markedly on the orientation of the crystals and the sense of the applied stress. This anisotropic behavior cannot be satisfactorily explained in terms of any of the mechanisms proposed so far, such as the mobility of jogs in screw dislocations, or the dissociation of a/2 [Formula: see text] screw dislocations on {112} planes.

2007 ◽  
Vol 561-565 ◽  
pp. 407-410 ◽  
Author(s):  
Koji Hagihara ◽  
Mayumi Mori ◽  
Yukichi Umakoshi

Plastic deformation behavior of Ni3V with D022 structure was examined using the single crystals containing two dominant variants of three. At [557] loading orientation, {111}1/6<112] twinning is dominantly operative at low temperatures, but {111}1/2<112] slip is activated at high temperatures accompanied by a rapid drop of yield stress.


2006 ◽  
Vol 980 ◽  
Author(s):  
Koji Hagihara ◽  
Mayumi Mori ◽  
Yukichi Umakoshi

AbstractPlastic deformation behavior of Ni3V with D022 structure was examined using the single crystals containing two dominant variants of three. Three deformation modes were confirmed to be operative depending on temperature and loading orientation. {111}1/6<112] twinning and/or {111}<110] slip is dominantly operative at low temperatures, but {111}1/2<112] slip is activated at high temperatures accompanied by a rapid drop of yield stress.


2000 ◽  
Vol 646 ◽  
Author(s):  
Haruyuki Inui ◽  
Koji Ishikawa ◽  
Masaharu Yamaguchi

ABSTRACTEffects of ternary additions on the deformation behavior of single crystals of MoSi2 with the hard [001] and soft [0 15 1] orientations have been investigated in compression and compression creep. The alloying elements studied include V, Cr, Nb and Al that form a C40 disilicide with Si and W and Re that form a C11b disilicide with Si. The addition of Al is found to decrease the yield strength of MoSi2 at all temperatures while the additions of V, Cr and Nb are found to decrease the yield strength at low temperatures and to increase the yield strength at high temperatures. In contrast, the additions of W and Re are found to increase the yield strength at all temperatures. The creep strain rate for the [001] orientation is significantly lower than that for the [0 15 1] orientation. The creep strain rate for both orientations is significantly improved by alloying with ternary elements such as Re and Nb.


2003 ◽  
Vol 805 ◽  
Author(s):  
Günter Krauss ◽  
Sofia Deloudi ◽  
Andrea Steiner ◽  
Walter Steurer ◽  
Amy R. Ross ◽  
...  

ABSTRACTThe stability of single-crystalline icosahedral Cd-Yb was investigated using X-ray diffraction methods in the temperature range 20 K ≤ T ≤ 900 K at ambient pressure and from ambient temperature to 873 K at about 9 GPa. Single-crystals remain stable at low temperatures and in the investigated HP-HT-regime. At high temperatures and ambient pressure, the quasicrystal decomposes. The application of mechanical stress at low temperatures yields to the same decomposition, the formation of Cd. A reaction of icosahedral Cd-Yb with traces of oxygen or water causing the decomposition seems reasonable, but a low-temperature instability of this binary quasi-crystal cannot be ruled out totally.


The mechanical properties of pure iron single crystals and of polycrystalline specimens of a zone-refined iron have been measured in compression over the temperature and strain rate ranges 2.2 to 293 °K and 7 x 10 -7 to 7 x 10 -3 s -1 respectively. Various yield stress parameters were determined as functions of both temperature and strain rate, and the reversible changes in flow stress produced by isothermal changes of strain rate or by changes of temperature at constant strain rate were also measured as functions of temperature, strain and strain rate. Both the temperature variation of the flow stress and the strain rate sensitivity of the flow stress were generally identical for the single crystals ( ca. 0.005/M carbon) and the polycrystalline specimens ( ca. 9/M carbon). At low temperatures, the temperature dependence of the yield stress was smaller than that of the flow stress at high strains, probably because of the effects of mechanical twinning, but once again the behaviour of single and polycrystalline specimens was very similar. Below 10 °K, both the flow stress and the extrapolated yield stress were independent of temperature. The results show that macroscopic yielding and flow at low temperatures are both governed by the same deformation mechanism, which is not very impurity sensitive, even in the very low carbon range covered by the experiments. The flow stress near 0 °K is ca. 5.8 x 10 -3 u where [i is the shear modulus. On the basis of a model for thermally activated flow, the activation volume at low temperatures (high stresses) is found to be ca. 5 b 3 . The exponent in the empirical power law for the dislocation velocity against stress relation is ca. 3 near room temperature, but becomes quite large at low temperatures. The results indicate that macroscopic deformation at low temperatures is governed by some kind of lattice frictional stress (Peierls-Nabarro force) acting on dislocations.


1996 ◽  
Vol 460 ◽  
Author(s):  
K. Yoshimi ◽  
S. Hanada ◽  
M. H. Yoo

ABSTRACTOur studies on yield stress anomaly of B2 FeAI single crystals are reviewed in this paper. A positive temperature dependence of yield stress, so-called “yield stress anomaly”, is observed in B2 FeAI in which excess vacancies are fully annealed out. Associated with the anomaly, characteristic asymmetry is found between tension and compression. While the strain-rate sensitivity is almost zero in the temperature range of the yield stress anomaly, the stress relaxation becomes significant with increasing temperature, indicating that a recovery process is thermally activated. It is ascertained by the two-surface trace analysis that slip transition from <111> direction at intermediate temperature to <100> at high temperature occurs around the peak temperature. Even at the peak temperature, in addition, operative slip vector for yielding is confirmed to be predominantly <111> by TEM. Also, it is observed that <111>-type superdislocations are frequently climb-dissociated in the temperature range of the anomaly. APB formation on {111} plane is energetically favorable, which is in agreement with the Flinn's calculation for the B2 superlattice that APB energy on {111} plane is lower than that on {110} plane. Such an anisotropy of APB energy would offer specific driving force for the climb dissociation on <111> superdislocations. On the basis of the observed results, the anomalous strengthening behavior of B2 FeAI single crystals is discussed.


1984 ◽  
Vol 39 ◽  
Author(s):  
G. Tichy ◽  
V. Vitek ◽  
D. P. Pope

ABSTRACTA rapid increase of the yield stress with increasing temperature, often observed in L12 ordered alloys, is commonly called the “anomalous flow behavior”. This phenomenon is believed to result from the thermally activated transformation of the core of 1/2<110> screw dislocations from a glissile form to a sessile form at high temperatures. It is shown here that another class of L12 alloys exists in which these two forms of the screw dislocation core are not available. These are the alloys in which the APB on {111} planes is not stable and the atomistic studies of screw dislocations in such alloys show that their cores are always sessile. The yield stress of these alloys then increases with decreasing temperature and no increase at high temperatures occurs. Such behavior has been observed, for example, in Pt3Al. This “normal” behavior is analogous to that of b.c.c. metals and a theory of the temperature dependence of the yield stress has been developed along the same lines as in the case of b.c.c. metals. Comparison of this theory with measurements on Pt3Al single crystals shows a good agreement.


1982 ◽  
Vol 56 (3) ◽  
pp. 211-218 ◽  
Author(s):  
F. Appel ◽  
U. Messerschmidt ◽  
V. Schmidt ◽  
O.V. Klyavin ◽  
A.V. Nikiforov

1994 ◽  
Vol 13 (12) ◽  
pp. 922-924
Author(s):  
Y. Watanabe ◽  
H. Miura ◽  
M. Kato ◽  
A. Sato

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