Hostname: page-component-78c5997874-94fs2 Total loading time: 0 Render date: 2024-11-05T15:45:33.048Z Has data issue: false hasContentIssue false

Interface Multiplication Through the Combination of Interface and Lattice Diffusion-Controlled Transformations in Alloys

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  10 February 2011

I. G. Solórzano
Affiliation:
DCMM/PUC-Rio, C.P.38008 – Gávea, 22452–900 Rio de Janeiro – RJ, Brazil
J. A. Cohn
Affiliation:
DCMM/PUC-Rio, C.P.38008 – Gávea, 22452–900 Rio de Janeiro – RJ, Brazil
R. M. Andrade
Affiliation:
DCMM/PUC-Rio, C.P.38008 – Gávea, 22452–900 Rio de Janeiro – RJ, Brazil
Get access

Abstract

A procedure for obtaining interface and grain boundary multiplication, without externally applied deformation, in alloy systems is described. It is shown that an essential prerequisite is the occurrence of, and the possibility of controlling, discontinuous precipitation (DP) reactions in the alloy. Several alloy systems have been studied and experimentally generated, in a controlled volume fraction, DP lamellar products in the following model alloys: Al%Ag; Al-22at%Zn; Cu-7at%In and Ni-8at%Sn. The resulting microstructures have been observed in detail through conventional and analytical electron microscopy, confirming that DP is a transformation controlled by solute diffusion along moving grain boundaries. Although the precipitates correspond to the equilibrium phase, the transformation, as a whole, does not reach thermodynamic equilibrium since high-resolution microanalysis of aged and quenched microstructures reveal that a significant amount of supersaturation is retained in the depleted lamellar matrix. In addition, TEM observations have revealed that the DP product, besides generating a high density of interfaces, is able to incorporate a significant amount of strain energy. On the other hand, the dissolution of the lamellar microstructures has been observed to proceed in both continuous and discontinuous fashions. The former, dominating at high dissolution temperatures, is controlled by volume diffusion and gives rise to the development of new microstructures in the original DP colonies: the generation of dislocations and their dynamic re-arrangement into a cellular sub-structure in Al – base alloys; the formation of new grains, in Cu-In and in Ni-Sn alloys. Operating mechanism are proposed and the nature of the driving force for the observed phenomena is discussed in terms of its chemical, interfacial and strain energy components.

Type
Research Article
Copyright
Copyright © Materials Research Society 2000

Access options

Get access to the full version of this content by using one of the access options below. (Log in options will check for institutional or personal access. Content may require purchase if you do not have access.)

References

REFERENCES

1. Solórzano, I.G. and Weatherly, G., Mater. As. Eng, 1986, 81, 101105.Google Scholar
2. Gust, W.: in Proc. Conf “Phase transfomations “, Ser. 3, N°. 11, Vol.1, University of York, April 1979, The Institution of Metallurgists, 11–27.Google Scholar
3. William, D.B. and Butler, E.P.: Int. Met. Ver., 1981, 3, 158.Google Scholar
4. Purdy, G.R.: in “Phase transformations 87”; 197, Cambridge, Cambridge University Press.Google Scholar
5. Zieba, P. and Gust, W., Int. Mat. Ver., 1998, 43, 7097.Google Scholar
6. Cahn, J.W., Acta Metall., 1959, 7, 8.Google Scholar
7. Solórzano, I.G. and Purdy, G.R., Metall. Trans., 1984, 15A, 1055–1063.Google Scholar
8. Hillert, M.: in The Mechanism of Phase Transformations in Crystalline Solids, Institute of Metals, Monograph # 33 London, 1969, vol.13, p. 499.Google Scholar
9. Hillert, M.: Acta Metall., 1982, vol.30, 1689.Google Scholar
10. Gust, W., Chuang, T.H., and Foumelle, R.A: Proc. Conf. CBECIMAT 7, 1986, 7.Google Scholar
11. Solórzano, I.G., Purdy, G.R. and Weartherly, G., Acta Metall, 1984, 32, 17091717.Google Scholar
12. Solórzano, I.G., Cahn, J.A. and Andrade, R.M.A. de, Mater. Sc. And Tech., 1991, 7, 565569.Google Scholar
13. Queiroz, A., Jardim, P. and Solórzano, I.G., Proc. 14th Congress Electron Microscopy, Inst. Of Physics, 1998, Vol. 2, 33–34.Google Scholar
14. Shiflet, G.J., Mater. Sci. Eng, 1986, 81, 61100.Google Scholar
15. Andrade, R.M. de and Solórzano, I.G., Proc. Int. Conf. Recrystallization, Mat. Sc. Forum, 1992, Vols. 113–115, 207–213.Google Scholar