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Grain Subdivision During Deformation Studied by Automatic EBSP

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  02 July 2020

D. Juul Jensen*
Affiliation:
Materials Department, Risø National Laboratory, DK-4000, Roskilde, Denmark
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During plastic deformation of typical metals the original grains subdivide. Subdivision by cell formation is a well-known phenomena in metals with medium to high stacking fault energy, but the subdivision may also take place on larger length scales by: i) Formation of single-walled dense dislocation walls (DDWs) and/or double-walled microbands (MBs). The DDWs/MBs are seen as elongated, nearly straight, vertically parallel dislocation boundaries which delineate several cells, thus bounding cell blocks. Typical examples are shown in Fig. 1. ii) Subdivision on a grain scale, for example due to grain-grain interactions or due to the formation of transition bands separating matrix bands. This subdivision is typical for both single crystals and polycrystals. For a general description and recent overview, see [1, 2].

The grain subdivision depends on the orientation of the grains. The morphology may appear different in grains of different orientations and the DDW/MBs can be parallel or inclined to a slip plane.

Type
Electron diffraction in the SEM: automated EBSP and its application
Copyright
Copyright © Microscopy Society of America

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References

references

1.Hughes, D.A., Proc. 16th Risø Int. Symp. (eds. Hansen, N.et al.) (1995) 63.Google Scholar
2.Hansen, N., Proc. Aluminium Alloys for Packaging III (ed. Das, S.K.) (1998) 59.Google Scholar
3.Wright, S.I., J. Comp. Ass. Microscopy 5 (1993) 201.Google Scholar