Article ID Journal Published Year Pages File Type
1579952 Materials Science and Engineering: A 2010 9 Pages PDF
Abstract

Experiments were conducted to evaluate the long-term microstructural stability of silver after processing using equal-channel angular pressing (ECAP). The results show that an ultrafine-grained microstructure is produced by ECAP at room temperature but there is self-annealing in the form of recovery and recrystallization during long-term storage at room temperature. In practice, the very low stacking fault energy of silver results in a high degree of dislocation dissociation and thereby hinders recovery by cross-slip and climb. The experiments examine the evolution of microstructure and the mechanical behavior as a function of the storage time after different numbers of ECAP passes. The results demonstrate that the degree and kinetics of self-annealing depend upon the number of passes imposed in ECAP.

Related Topics
Physical Sciences and Engineering Materials Science Materials Science (General)
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