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Introduction to Materials Science, Chapter 9, Phase Diagrams

Introduction to Materials Science, Chapter 9, Phase Diagrams

Introduction to Materials Science, Chapter 9, Phase Diagrams

Chapter Outline: Phase Diagrams


Definitions: Components and Phases Definitions: Solubility Limit

Microstructure and Phase Transformations in Multicomponent Systems Component - chemically recognizable species (Fe and C in carbon steel, H2 O and NaCl in salted water). A binary alloy contains two components, a ternary alloy three, etc.

Solvent - host or major component in solution, solute minor component (Chapter 4).

Definitions and basic concepts

Phases and microstructure

Binary isomorphous systems (complete solid solubility)

Binary eutectic systems (limited solid solubility)

Binary systems with intermediate phases/compounds

Phase a portion of a system that has uniform physical and chemical characteristics. Two distinct phases in a system have distinct physical or chemical characteristics (e.g. water and ice) and are separated from each other by definite phase boundaries . A phase may contain one or more components.

Solubility Limit of a component in a phase is the maximum amount of the component that can be dissolved in it (e.g. alcohol has unlimited solubility in water, sugar has a limited solubility, oil is insoluble). The same concepts apply to solid phases: Cu and Ni are mutually soluble in any amount (unlimited solid solubility), while C has a limited solubility in Fe.

The iron-carbon system (steel and cast iron)

Not tested: 8.12 The Gibbs Phase Rule

A single-phase system is called homogeneous, systems with two or more phases are mixtures or heterogeneous systems.

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University of Virginia, Dept. of Materials Science and Engineering

University of Virginia, Dept. of Materials Science and Engineering

Introduction to Materials Science, Chapter 9, Phase Diagrams

Introduction to Materials Science, Chapter 9, Phase Diagrams

Introduction to Materials Science, Chapter 9, Phase Diagrams

Microstructure

Equilibrium and Metastable States A system is at equilibrium if at constant temperature, pressure and composition the system is stable, not changing with time.

Phase diagram
A phase diagram - graphical representation of the combinations of temperature, pressure, composition, or other variables for which specific phases exist at equilibrium.

The properties of an alloy depend not only on proportions of the phases but also on how they are arranged structurally at the microscopic level. Thus, the microstructure is specified by the number of phases, their proportions, and their arrangement in space.

Microstructure of cast Iron

Equilibrium is the state that is achieved given sufficient time. But the time to achieve equilibrium may be very long (the kinetics can be slow) that a state along the path to the equilibrium may appear to be stable. This is called a metastable state .
In thermodynamics the equilibrium is described as the state of system that corresponds to the minimum of thermodynamic function called the free energy. Thermodynamics tells us that

For H2 O, a typical diagram shows the temperature and pressure at which ice (solid),water (liquid) and steam (gas) exist.

This is an alloy of Fe with 4 wt.% C. There are several phases. The long gray regions are flakes of graphite. The matrix is a fine mixture of BCC Fe and Fe3 C compound.

Phase diagrams will help us to understand and predict microstructures like the one shown in this page
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Under conditions of a constant temperature and pressure and composition, the direction of any spontaneous change is toward a lower free energy. The state of stable thermodynamic equilibrium equilibrium is the one with minimum free energy. A system at a metastable state is trapped in a local minimum of free energy that is not the global one. metastable
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University of Virginia, Dept. of Materials Science and Engineering

Free Energy

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Introduction to Materials Science, Chapter 9, Phase Diagrams

Introduction to Materials Science, Chapter 9, Phase Diagrams

Introduction to Materials Science, Chapter 9, Phase Diagrams

Phase diagram Binary Isomorphous Systems (I)


Isomorphous system - complete solid solubility of the two components (both in the liquid and solid phases). Example of isomorphous system: Cu-Ni (the complete solubility occurs because both Cu and Ni have the same crystal structure, FCC, similar radii, electronegativity and valence).

Binary Isomorphous Systems (II)

A phase diagrams show what phases exist at equilibrium and what phase transformations we can expect when we change one of the parameters of the system (T, P, composition). L

We will discuss phase diagrams for binary alloys only and will assume pressure to be constant at one atmosphere. Phase diagrams for materials with more than two components are complex and difficult to represent.

+L

Three phase region can be identified on the phase diagram: Liquid (L) , solid + liquid ( +L), solid ( ) Liquidus line separates liquid from liquid + solid Solidus line separates solid from liquid + solid
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University of Virginia, Dept. of Materials Science and Engineering

Introduction to Materials Science, Chapter 9, Phase Diagrams

Introduction to Materials Science, Chapter 9, Phase Diagrams

Introduction to Materials Science, Chapter 9, Phase Diagrams

Binary Isomorphous Systems (III)

Interpretation of Phase Diagrams


For a given temperature and composition we can use phase diagram to determine: 1) The phases that are present 2) Compositions of the phases 3) The relative fractions of the phases

The Lever Rule


Finding the amounts of phases in a two phase region: 1. Locate composition and temperature in diagram 2. In two phase region draw the tie line or isotherm

In one-component system melting occurs at a well-defined melting temperature.

In multi-component systems melting occurs over the range of temperatures, between the solidus and liquidus lines. Solid and liquid phases are in equilibrium in this temperature range.

3. Fraction of a phase is determined by taking the length of the tie line to the phase boundary for the other phase, and dividing by the total length of tie line

L Liquid solution

Finding the composition in a two phase region: 1. Locate composition and temperature in diagram 2. In two phase region draw the tie line or isotherm 3. Note intersection with phase boundaries. Read compositions at the intersections. The liquid and solid phases have these compositions.

+L
Liquid solution + Crystallites of Solid solution

The lever rule is a mechanical analogy to the mass balance calculation. The tie line in the two-phase region is analogous to a lever balanced on a fulcrum.

Polycrystal

Solid solution

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Introduction to Materials Science, Chapter 9, Phase Diagrams

Introduction to Materials Science, Chapter 9, Phase Diagrams

Introduction to Materials Science, Chapter 9, Phase Diagrams

The Lever Rule 1) All material must be in one phase or the other: W + WL = 1 2) Mass of a component that is present in both phases equal to the mass of the component in one phase + mass of the component in the second phase: WC + WLCL = Co 3) Solution of these equations gives us the Lever rule. WL = (C - Co) / (C - CL) W = (Co - CL) / (C - CL) Co = 35 wt. %, CL = 31.5 wt. %, C = 42.5 wt. % Mass fractions: WL = (C - Co) / (C - CL) = 0.68 W = (Co - CL) / (C - CL) = 0.32
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Derivation of the lever rule

Phase compositions and amounts. An example.

Mass fractions: WL = S / (R+S) = (C - Co) / (C - CL)

W = R / (R+S) = (Co - CL) / (C - CL)

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Introduction to Materials Science, Chapter 9, Phase Diagrams

Introduction to Materials Science, Chapter 9, Phase Diagrams

Introduction to Materials Science, Chapter 9, Phase Diagrams

Development of microstructure in isomorphous alloys Equilibrium (very slow) cooling

Development of microstructure in isomorphous alloys Equilibrium (very slow) cooling

Development of microstructure in isomorphous alloys Non-equilibrium cooling

Solidification in the solid + liquid phase occurs gradually upon cooling from the liquidus line. The composition of the solid and the liquid change gradually during cooling (as can be determined by the tie-line method.) Nuclei of the solid phase form and they grow to consume all the liquid at the solidus line.

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Introduction to Materials Science, Chapter 9, Phase Diagrams

Introduction to Materials Science, Chapter 9, Phase Diagrams

Introduction to Materials Science, Chapter 9, Phase Diagrams

Development of microstructure in isomorphous alloys Non-equilibrium cooling Solid solution strengthening alloys with limited solubility Binary Eutectic Systems (I)

Mechanical properties of isomorphous alloys

Compositional changes require diffusion in solid and liquid phases

The tie-line method still works for the liquid phase, where diffusion is fast. Average Ni content of solid grains is higher. Application of the lever rule gives us a greater proportion of liquid phase as compared to the one for equilibrium cooling at the same T. Solidus line is shifted to the right (higher Ni contents), solidification is complete at lower T, the outer part of the grains are richer in the low-melting component (Cu).

Upon heating grain boundaries will melt first. This can lead to premature mechanical failure.

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University of Virginia, Dept. of Materials Science and Engineering

Temperature, C
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Diffusion in the solid state is very slow. The new layers that solidify on top of the existing grains have the equilibrium composition at that temperature but once they are solid their composition does not change. Formation of layered (cored) grains and the invalidity of the tie-line method to determine the composition of the solid phase.

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Introduction to Materials Science, Chapter 9, Phase Diagrams

Introduction to Materials Science, Chapter 9, Phase Diagrams

Introduction to Materials Science, Chapter 9, Phase Diagrams

Binary Eutectic Systems (II) Binary Eutectic Systems (III)

Binary Eutectic Systems (IV)

Lead Tin phase diagram

Eutectic reaction transition between liquid and mixture of two solid phases, + at eutectic concentration CE. The melting point of the eutectic alloy is lower than that of the components ( eutectic = easy to melt in Greek).

Invariant or eutectic point

At most two phases can be in equilibrium within a phase field. Three phases (L, , ) may be in equilibrium only only at a few points along the eutectic isotherm. Singlephase regions are separated by 2-phase regions.

Eutectic isotherm

Copper Silver phase diagram

Three single phase regions ( - solid solution of Ag in Cu matrix, = solid solution of Cu in Ag marix, L - liquid)

Three two-phase regions ( + L, +L, + )

Eutectic or invariant point - Liquid and two solid phases co-exist in equilibrium at the eutectic composition CE and the eutectic temperature T E. Eutectic isotherm - the horizontal solidus line at T E.
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Solvus line separates one solid solution from a mixture of Solvus line shows limit of solubility solid solutions.

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Introduction to Materials Science, Chapter 9, Phase Diagrams

Introduction to Materials Science, Chapter 9, Phase Diagrams

Introduction to Materials Science, Chapter 9, Phase Diagrams

Binary Eutectic Systems (V) Several different types of microstructure can be formed in slow cooling an different compositions. Lets consider cooling of liquid lead tin system at different compositions. At compositions between the room temperature solubility limit and the maximum solid solubility at the eutectic temperature, phase nucleates as the solid solubility is exceeded upon crossing the solvus line.

Development of microstructure in eutectic alloys (I)

Development of microstructure in eutectic alloys (II)

Compositions and relative amounts of phases are determined from the same tie lines and lever rule, as for isomorphous alloys

A
L

B
In this case of lead-rich alloy (0-2 wt. % of tin) solidification proceeds in the same manner as for isomorphous alloys (e.g. Cu-Ni) that we discussed earlier.

+L +

L +L

For points A, B, and C calculate the compositions (wt. %) and relative amounts (mass fractions) of phases present.
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University of Virginia, Dept. of Materials Science and Engineering

Introduction to Materials Science, Chapter 9, Phase Diagrams

Introduction to Materials Science, Chapter 9, Phase Diagrams

Introduction to Materials Science, Chapter 9, Phase Diagrams

Development of microstructure in eutectic alloys (III) Solidification at the eutectic composition (I)

Development of microstructure in eutectic alloys (IV) Solidification at the eutectic composition (II) Compositions of and phases are very different eutectic reaction involves redistribution of Pb and Sn atoms by atomic diffusion. This simultaneous formation of and phases result in a layered (lamellar) microstructure that is called eutectic structure .

Development of microstructure in eutectic alloys (V) Compositions other than eutectic but within the range of the eutectic isotherm Primary phase is formed in the + L region, and the eutectic structure that includes layers of and phases (called eutectic and eutectic phases) is formed upon crossing the eutectic isotherm.

No changes above the eutectic temperature TE. At TE the liquid transforms to and phases (eutectic reaction).

+ L +

Formation of the eutectic structure in the lead-tin system.


In the micrograph, the dark layers are lead-reach phase, the light layers are the tin-reach phase.
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L +

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Introduction to Materials Science, Chapter 9, Phase Diagrams

Introduction to Materials Science, Chapter 9, Phase Diagrams

Introduction to Materials Science, Chapter 9, Phase Diagrams

Development of microstructure in eutectic alloys (VI) How to calculate the total amount of phase (both eutectic and primary)? Eutectic microconstituent forms from liquid having eutectic composition (61.9 wt% Sn)

How to calculate relative amounts of microconstituents?

Microconstituent element of the microstructure having a distinctive structure. In the case described in the previous page, microstructure consists of two microconstituents, primary phase and the eutectic structure. We can treat the eutectic as a separate phase and apply the lever rule to find the relative fractions of primary phase (18.3 wt% Sn) and the eutectic structure (61.9 wt% Sn): W = (Q+R) / (P+Q+R) ( phase) W = P / (P+Q+R) ( phase) We = P / (P+Q) (eutectic) W = Q / (P+Q) (primary)

Fraction of phase determined by application of the lever rule across the entire + phase field:

Although the eutectic structure consists of two phases, it is a microconstituent with distinct lamellar structure and fixed ratio of the two phases.
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University of Virginia, Dept. of Materials Science and Engineering

Introduction to Materials Science, Chapter 9, Phase Diagrams

Introduction to Materials Science, Chapter 9, Phase Diagrams

Introduction to Materials Science, Chapter 9, Phase Diagrams

Phase Diagrams with Intermediate Phases

Phase Diagrams with Intermetallic Compounds Besides solid solutions, intermetallic compounds, that have precise chemical compositions can exist in some systems. When using the lever rules, intermetallic compounds are treated like any other phase, except they appear not as a wide region but as a vertical line.

Eutectoid Reactions (I) The eutectoid (eutectic-like in Greek) reaction is similar to the eutectic reaction but occurs from one solid phase to two new solid phases. Invariant point (the eutectoid) three solid phases are in equilibrium. Upon cooling, a solid phase transforms into two other solid phases ( + in the example below) Looks as V on top of a horizontal tie line (eutectoid isotherm) in the phase diagram.

Eutectic systems that we have studied so far have only two solid phases ( and ) that exist near the ends of phase diagrams. These phases are called terminal solid solutions.

Some binary alloy systems have intermediate solid solution phases. In phase diagrams, these phases are separated from the composition extremes (0% and 100%).

Example: in Cu-Zn, and are terminal solid solutions, , , , , are intermediate solid solutions.

Cu-Zn intermetallic compound

Eutectoid

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This diagram can be thought of as two joined eutectic diagrams, for Mg-Mg2Pb and Mg2Pb-Pb. In this case University of Virginia, Dept. of Materials Science Engineering Pb can be considered as a and component. compound Mg2 35

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Introduction to Materials Science, Chapter 9, Phase Diagrams

Introduction to Materials Science, Chapter 9, Phase Diagrams

Introduction to Materials Science, Chapter 9, Phase Diagrams

Eutectoid Reactions (II) A peritectic reaction - solid phase and liquid phase will together form a second solid phase at a particular temperature and composition upon cooling - e.g. L + These reactions are rather slow as the product phase will form at the boundary between the two reacting phases thus separating them, and slowing down any further reaction. Congruent melting of

Peritectic Reactions Congruent Phase Transformations A congruent transformation involves no change in composition (e.g., allotropic transformation such as -Fe to -Fe or melting transitions in pure solids). For an incongruent transformation, at least one phase changes composition (e.g. eutectic, eutectoid, peritectic reactions). Ni-Ti

The above phase diagram contains both an eutectic Peritectics are not as common as eutectics and eutectiods, but do occur in some alloy systems. There is one in the FeC system that we will consider later.
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reaction and its solid-state analog, an eutectoid reaction

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Introduction to Materials Science, Chapter 9, Phase Diagrams

Introduction to Materials Science, Chapter 9, Phase Diagrams

Introduction to Materials Science, Chapter 9, Phase Diagrams

The IronIron Carbide (FeFe3C) Phase Diagram

Phases in FeFe3C Phase Diagram

A few comments on FeFe3C system C is an interstitial impurity in Fe. It forms a solid solution with , , phases of iron Maximum solubility in BCC -ferrite is limited (max. 0.022 wt% at 727 C) - BCC has relatively small interstitial positions Maximum solubility in FCC austenite is 2.14 wt% at 1147 C - FCC has larger interstitial positions Mechanical properties: Cementite is very hard and brittle can strengthen steels. Mechanical properties also depend on the microstructure, that is, how ferrite and cementite are mixed. Magnetic properties: -ferrite is magnetic below 768 C, austenite is non-magnetic Classification. Three types of ferrous alloys: Iron: less than 0.008 wt % C in ferrite at room T

-ferrite - solid solution of C in BCC Fe


Stable form of iron at room temperature. The maximum solubility of C is 0.022 wt% Transforms to FCC -austenite at 912 C

In their simplest form, steels are alloys of Iron (Fe) and Carbon (C). The Fe-C phase diagram is a fairly complex one, but we will only consider the steel part of the diagram, up to around 7% Carbon.

-austenite - solid solution of C in FCC Fe


The maximum solubility of C is 2.14 wt %. Transforms to BCC -ferrite at 1395 C Is not stable below the eutectic temperature (727 C) unless cooled rapidly (Chapter 10)

-ferrite solid solution of C in BCC Fe


The same structure as -ferrite Stable only at high T, above 1394 C Melts at 1538 C

Fe3C (iron carbide or cementite) This intermetallic compound is metastable, it remains as a compound indefinitely at room T, but decomposes (very slowly, within several years) into -Fe and C (graphite) at 650 - 700 C Fe-C liquid solution
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Steels: 0.008 - 2.14 wt % C (usually < 1 wt % ) -ferrite + Fe3C at room T (Chapter 12) Cast iron: 2.14 - 6.7 wt % (usually < 4.5 wt %)
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University of Virginia, Dept. of Materials Science and Engineering

Introduction to Materials Science, Chapter 9, Phase Diagrams

Introduction to Materials Science, Chapter 9, Phase Diagrams

Introduction to Materials Science, Chapter 9, Phase Diagrams

Eutectic and eutectoid reactions in FeFe3C Microstructure depends on composition (carbon content) and heat treatment. In the discussion below we consider slow cooling in which equilibrium is maintained. When alloy of eutectoid composition (0.76 wt % C) is cooled slowly it forms perlite, a lamellar or layered structure of two phases: -ferrite and cementite (Fe3C) The layers of alternating phases in pearlite are formed for the same reason as layered structure of eutectic structures: redistribution C atoms between ferrite (0.022 wt%) and cementite (6.7 wt%) by atomic diffusion. Mechanically, pearlite has properties intermediate to soft, ductile ferrite and hard, brittle cementite.
In the micrograph, the dark areas are Fe3C layers, the light phase is ferrite

Development of Microstructure in Iron - Carbon alloys

Microstructure of eutectoid steel (II)

Eutectic: 4.30 wt% C, 1147 C L + Fe3C Microstructure of eutectoid steel (I)

(0.76 wt% C) (0.022 wt% C) + Fe3C


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Eutectoid: 0.76 wt%C, 727 C

Eutectic and eutectoid reactions are very important in

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heat treatment of steels

Introduction to Materials Science, Chapter 9, Phase Diagrams

Introduction to Materials Science, Chapter 9, Phase Diagrams

Introduction to Materials Science, Chapter 9, Phase Diagrams

Microstructure of hypoeutectoid steel (I)

Microstructure of hypoeutectoid steel (II)


Hypoeutectoid alloys contain proeutectoid ferrite (formed above the eutectoid temperature) plus the eutectoid perlite that contain eutectoid ferrite and cementite.

Microstructure of hypereutectoid steel (I)


Compositions to the right of eutectoid (0.76 - 2.14 wt % C) hypereutectoid (more than eutectoid -Greek) alloys.

Compositions to the left of eutectoid (0.022 - 0.76 wt % C) hypoeutectoid (less than eutectoid -Greek) alloys.

+ + Fe3C

+ Fe3C + Fe3C

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Introduction to Materials Science, Chapter 9, Phase Diagrams

Introduction to Materials Science, Chapter 9, Phase Diagrams

Introduction to Materials Science, Chapter 9, Phase Diagrams

Microstructure of hypereutectoid steel (II)


Example for hypereutectoid alloy with composition C1 Fraction of pearlite: WP = X / (V+X) = (6.7 C1) / (6.7 0.76) Fraction of proeutectoid cementite: WFe3C = V / (V+X) = (C1 0.76) / (6.7 0.76) Application of the lever rule with tie line that extends from the eutectoid composition (0.75 wt% C) to ( + Fe3 C) boundary (0.022 wt% C) for hypoeutectoid alloys and to ( + Fe3C) Fe3C boundary (6.7 wt% C) for hipereutectoid alloys.

Hypereutectoid alloys contain proeutectoid cementite (formed above the eutectoid temperature) plus perlite that contain eutectoid ferrite and cementite.

How to calculate the relative amounts of proeutectoid phase ( or Fe3C) and pearlite?

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Fraction of phase is determined by application of the University of Virginia, Dept. ( of Materials Science and Engineering phase field: lever rule across the entire + Fe3C) 50

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Introduction to Materials Science, Chapter 9, Phase Diagrams

Introduction to Materials Science, Chapter 9, Phase Diagrams

Summary Reading for next class:


Chapter 10: Phase Transformations in Metals Kinetics of phase transformations Multiphase Transformations Phase transformations in Fe-C alloys Isothermal Transformation Diagrams Mechanical Behavior Tempered Martensite Optional reading (Parts that are not covered / not tested): 10.6 Continuous Cooling Transformation Diagrams

Make sure you understand language and concepts:

Austenite Cementite Component Congruent transformation Equilibrium Eutectic phase Eutectic reaction Eutectic structure Eutectoid reaction Ferrite Hypereutectoid alloy Hypoeutectoid alloy Intermediate solid solution Intermetallic compound Invariant point Isomorphous Lever rule Liquidus line Metastable
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Microconstituent Pearlite Peritectic reaction Phase Phase diagram Phase equilibrium Primary phase Proeutectoid cementite Proeutectoid ferrite Solidus line Solubility limit Solvus line System Terminal solid solution Tie line

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