Apparent Hall-Petch effects in polycrystalline lamellar TiAl

被引:30
|
作者
Kad, BK
Asaro, RJ
机构
[1] Department of Applied Mechanics & Engineering Sciences, University of Califomia-San Diego, La Jolla, CA
基金
美国国家科学基金会;
关键词
D O I
10.1080/01418619708210284
中图分类号
T [工业技术];
学科分类号
08 ;
摘要
The mechanisms responsible for the extremely high Hall-Fetch slope of K-y approximate to 5MPa m(1/2), for grain sizes d in the range 3000-200 mu m, in fully lamellar (FL) and nearly lamellar (NL) TiAl microstructures are explored. It is shown that the constraints exerted by the neighbouring crystals, particularly those oriented in the hard mode, are the dominant factors controlling the yield stress. At large grain sizes (and small sample dimensions), these constraints are largely relaxed, because of free boundary conditions, thereby severely underestimating the true yield stress. Numerically computed flow stress curves illustrate that the sample gauge diameter D, for approximating bulk behaviour, for Hall-Fetch measurements, scales with the hard-mode (g(2) degrees) against soft-mode (g(1) degrees) critical resolved shear stress anisotropy. Thus, while D/d approximate to 10 meets the bulk requirement for nearly isotropic, fully gamma alloys, the minimum number of crystals required to approach bulk behaviour is 400 or more (i.e. D/d greater than or equal to 20) for nominal plastic anisotropy (g(2) degrees/g(1) degrees approximate to 12) of the (FL, NL) lamellar alloys. This requirement is expected to be further exacerbated as the ratio increases, with the limit (g(2) degrees/g(1) degrees --> infinity, as g(2) degrees --> infinity) of having only one slip system as input. A similar high Hall-Fetch slope (K-y approximate to 4.42 MFa m(1/2)) is derived from computed results by simply considering the geometrical factors pertaining to material constraint for D/d in the range 1-20 for lamellar microstructures. Thus, increasing constrained volume fraction, as the grain size decreases, is concomitant with the increase in yield stress, and the ensuing Hall-Fetch slope.
引用
收藏
页码:87 / 104
页数:18
相关论文
共 50 条
  • [21] Transition between Hall-Petch and inverse Hall-Petch behavior in nanocrystalline silicon carbide
    Chavoshi, Saeed Zare
    Branicio, Paulo S.
    An, Qi
    PHYSICAL REVIEW MATERIALS, 2021, 5 (07):
  • [22] Effect of deformation temperature on Hall-Petch relationship registered for polycrystalline magnesium
    Ono, N
    Nowak, R
    Miura, S
    MATERIALS LETTERS, 2004, 58 (1-2) : 39 - 43
  • [23] INVERSE HALL-PETCH EFFECT IN ATOMISTIC MACHINING OF POLYCRYSTALLINE COPPER STRUCTURES
    Shi, Jing
    Wang, Yachao
    Yang, Xiaoping
    PROCEEDINGS OF THE ASME INTERNATIONAL MANUFACTURING SCIENCE AND ENGINEERING CONFERENCE 2011, VOL 2, 2011, : 555 - 562
  • [24] METRICATION AND HALL-PETCH RELATIONSHIP
    BROWNRIG.A
    BROWN, GG
    JOURNAL OF THE AUSTRALASIAN INSTITUTE OF METALS, 1973, 18 (03): : 157 - 157
  • [25] HALL-PETCH ANALYSIS FOR NANOPOLYCRYSTALS
    Armstrong, Ronald W.
    NANOMETALS - STATUS AND PERSPECTIVE, 2012, : 181 - 199
  • [26] On the extrinsic hall-petch to inverse Hall-Petch transition in nanocrystalline Ni-Co electrodeposits
    Kong, Jonathan
    Haché, Michel J.R.
    Tam, Jason
    McCrea, Jonathan L.
    Howe, Jane
    Erb, Uwe
    Scripta Materialia, 2022, 218
  • [28] Hall-Petch strengthening in nanocrystalline metals
    Weertman, J.R.
    Materials Science and Engineering A, 1993, A166 (1-2) : 161 - 167
  • [29] Hall-Petch analysis for temperature and strain rate dependent deformation of polycrystalline lead
    V. E. Panin
    R. W. Armstrong
    Physical Mesomechanics, 2016, 19 : 35 - 40
  • [30] Hall-Petch analysis for temperature and strain rate dependent deformation of polycrystalline lead
    Panin, V. E.
    Armstrong, R. W.
    PHYSICAL MESOMECHANICS, 2016, 19 (01) : 35 - 40