Article ID Journal Published Year Pages File Type
7970553 Materials Characterization 2015 10 Pages PDF
Abstract
Bulk polycrystalline nickel compact was processed by spark plasma sintering from heterogeneous powder consisting of a mixture of nanometer and micrometer sized particles. The consolidated samples inherited the bimodal structure of the starting powder and was composed of ~ 55 vol.% coarse-grained (with the grain size larger than 1 μm) and ~ 45 vol.% ultrafine-grained (with an average grain size of ~ 550 nm) components. The deformation mechanisms were established by EBSD, X-ray line profile analysis and in-situ TEM observations. In the ultrafine-grained volume, the deformation occurred mainly through the activation of dislocation sources emitting full or partial dislocation either from grain interior or grain boundaries. Besides dislocation activity, rolling and sliding of nanograins were also observed during deformation by in-situ transmission electron microscopy, which have a considerable contribution to the observed high strain rate sensitivity of the bimodal microstructure. The cracks formed during deformation easily propagated in the nanograin regions due to the weaker particle bonding caused by the relatively high fraction of native oxide layer on the surface of the initial nanoparticles.
Related Topics
Physical Sciences and Engineering Materials Science Materials Science (General)
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