Article ID Journal Published Year Pages File Type
1574893 Materials Science and Engineering: A 2014 9 Pages PDF
Abstract
Dynamic abnormal grain growth (DAGG) is a phenomenon that produces one or more very large, abnormal grains during plastic deformation of polycrystalline material at high temperatures. DAGG was previously observed in commercial-purity molybdenum (Mo) and was used to produce large Mo single crystals of centimeters in length. The present investigation is the first to demonstrate DAGG in commercial-purity tantalum (Ta) sheet, another body-centered-cubic refractory metal. DAGG occurs in Ta at temperatures from 1450-1850 °C across strain rates from 3×10−5 to 5×10−4 s−1. Grain boundary migration rates during DAGG in Ta are on the order of 10 mm/min. DAGG produces large abnormal grains preferentially oriented with the 〈101〉 direction approximately parallel to the tensile axis. A unique observation of this investigation is a preponderance of Σ3 special boundary character along the boundaries of large abnormal grains produced in Ta through DAGG. The propensity toward this special boundary character is a result of a relatively large grain size and strong texture in the polycrystalline material prior to DAGG and the typically low energy of Σ3 boundaries, which suppress boundary migration.
Related Topics
Physical Sciences and Engineering Materials Science Materials Science (General)
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