Article ID Journal Published Year Pages File Type
7978139 Materials Science and Engineering: A 2015 4 Pages PDF
Abstract
The resolution dependence of orientation gradients was studied in a well-annealed 99.9995% pure polycrystalline copper pulled to failure in tension. Owing to the well developed neck, different regions in the sample correspond to different tensile strains. Post-mortem characterization was performed using EBSD on cross-sections containing the tensile axis. Kernel average misorientation (KAM) was calculated as a metric to establish correlation between defect accumulation and microstructural features, with a threshold of 5° to focus on intra-granular gradients. The region with the lowest strain (2%) showed high KAM values adjacent to grain boundaries compared to the grain interior, regardless of the point spacing, i.e. the spatial resolution. However, in the region with the highest strain (13%) a strong dependence on resolution was found. For point spacings of 0.5 μm or smaller, the same correlation of high KAM with locations near boundaries was found. At coarse spacings i.e. low spatial resolution, by contrast, the reverse was found in that the highest KAM values appear in the grain interiors, as previously observed in X-ray microscopy on the same sample which had a similar coarse resolution. An analysis of orientation gradients parallel to, and perpendicular to boundaries suggested that the latter tend to be the larger of the two. This helps to explain why boundary-adjacent points have low KAM values. The conclusion is that measurement of local orientation gradient requires a resolution that is comparable to the dislocation substructure.
Related Topics
Physical Sciences and Engineering Materials Science Materials Science (General)
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