An Sem/Ebsd Study of Shear Bands Formation in Al-0.23%wt.Zr Alloy Deformed in Plane Strain Compression / Krystalograficzne Aspekty Formowania Sie Pasm Scinania W Stopie Al-0.23%Wag.Zr Odkształcanym W Próbie Nieswobodnego Sciskania

2013 ◽  
Vol 58 (1) ◽  
pp. 145-150 ◽  
Author(s):  
H. Paul ◽  
P. Uliasz ◽  
M. Miszczyk ◽  
W. Skuza ◽  
T. Knych

The crystal lattice rotations induced by shear bands formation have been examined in order to investigate the influence of grain boundaries on slip propagation and the resulting texture evolution. The issue was analysed on Al-0.23wt.%Zr alloy as a representative of face centered cubic metals with medium-to-high stacking fault energy. After solidification, the microstructure of the alloy was composed of flat, twin-oriented, large grains. The samples were cut-off from the as-cast ingot in such a way that the twinning planes were situated almost parallel to the compression plane. The samples were then deformed at 77K in channel-die up to strains of 0.69. To correlate the substructure with the slip patterns, the deformed specimens were examined by SEM equipped with a field emission gun and electron backscattered diffraction facilities. Microtexture measurements showed that strictly defined crystal lattice re-orientations occurred in the sample volumes situated within the area of the broad macroscopic shear bands (MSB), although the grains initially had quite different crystallographic orientations. Independently of the grain orientation, their crystal lattice rotated in such a way that one of the f111g slip planes became nearly parallel to the plane of maximum shear. This facilitates the slip propagation across the grain boundaries along the shear direction without any visible variation in the slip plane. A natural consequence of this rotation is the formation of specific MSB microtextures which facilitates slip propagation across grain boundaries.

2016 ◽  
Vol 716 ◽  
pp. 240-247
Author(s):  
Henryk Paul ◽  
Magdalena M. Miszczyk

The microstructure and texture evolution in commercially pure aluminium (AA1050 alloy) and copper have been characterized after change in strain path to elucidate the mechanisms of shear bands (SBs) formation and propagation across grain boundaries. Samples were pre-deformed in equal channel angular pressing (ECAP) and further compressed in a channel-die to form two sets of macro-SBs. The deformation-induced sub-structures and local changes in crystallographic orientations were characterized by scanning electron microscopy equipped with a high-resolution electron backscattered diffraction facility. It was found that the mechanism of micro-/macro-SBs formation is strictly crystallographic. In all the grains of the sheared zone a strong tendency to strain-induced re-orientation could be observed. Their crystal lattice rotated in such a way that one of the {111} slip planes became nearly parallel to the shear plane and the <011> (or <112>) direction became parallel to the direction of maximum shear. This crystal lattice rotation led to the formation of specific SBs components which facilitates slip propagation across grain boundaries without any visible variation in the slip direction.


2010 ◽  
Vol 160 ◽  
pp. 257-264 ◽  
Author(s):  
Henryk Paul

Periodic crystal lattice rotations within compact clusters of shear bands, developed in copper, have been characterized over a range of scales by optical microscopy, high resolution FEG-SEM-EBSD and TEM orientation mapping, to examine the role of local lattice re-orientation on slip propagation across pre-existing barriers to dislocation motion. Two different cases were analysed in detail. The single crystal analysis addresses the relation between the crystallographic microtexture and microstructure development due to the crystal anisotropy after a strain path change. All the changes in strain path directly lead to crystallite subdivisions and strain localization in the form of macroscopically visible bands of different morphology at the micro scale. The elongated cell substructure formed during primary straining was the source of anisotropy after changing deformation path. It is thought that the presence of this structure (here subcells) as barriers to dislocation motion is crucial for the occurrence of shear banding. The analysis of pure polycrystalline copper has been focused on the influence of local lattice re-orientations within particular grains on slip propagation across grain boundaries. The crystal lattice rotated in such a way that one of the {111} slip planes became nearly parallel to the direction of maximum shear (due to the actual state of anisotropy). A natural consequence of this rotation was the formation of a specific microtexture which facilitated slip propagation across grain boundaries.


Author(s):  
Robert C. Rau ◽  
Robert L. Ladd

Recent studies have shown the presence of voids in several face-centered cubic metals after neutron irradiation at elevated temperatures. These voids were found when the irradiation temperature was above 0.3 Tm where Tm is the absolute melting point, and were ascribed to the agglomeration of lattice vacancies resulting from fast neutron generated displacement cascades. The present paper reports the existence of similar voids in the body-centered cubic metals tungsten and molybdenum.


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