Dislocations & Strengthening Mechanisms: Issues To Address..
Dislocations & Strengthening Mechanisms: Issues To Address..
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Dislocations & Materials Classes
• Metals: Disl. motion easier.
+ + + + + + + +
-non-directional bonding + + + + + + + +
-close-packed directions + + + + + + + +
for slip. electron cloud ion cores
• Covalent Ceramics
(Si, diamond): Motion hard.
-directional (angular) bonding
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Dislocation Motion
Dislocations & plastic deformation
• Cubic & hexagonal metals - plastic deformation by
plastic shear or slip where one plane of atoms slides
over adjacent plane by defect motion (dislocations).
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FCC Stacking Sequence
• ABCABC... Stacking Sequence
• 2D Projection
B B
C
A
A sites B B B
C C
B sites B B
C sites
A
• FCC Unit Cell B
C
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Stress and Dislocation Motion
• Crystals slip due to a resolved shear stress, tR.
• Applied tension can produce such a stress.
Applied tensile Resolved shear Relation between
stress: s = F/A stress: tR =Fs /A s s and tR
A
F slip plane
tR tR = FS /AS
normal, ns
AS Fcos l A/cos f
FS
F nS f
l A
tR FS AS
F
tR s cos l cos f
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Critical Resolved Shear Stress
• Condition for dislocation motion: tR tCRSS
• Crystal orientation can make typically
it easy or hard to move dislocation
10-4 GPa to 10-2 GPa
tR s cos l cos f
s s s
tR = 0 tR = s/2 tR = 0
l =90° l =45° f =90°
f =45°
t maximum at l = f = 45º 8
Single Crystal Slip
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Problem
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Solution
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Slip Motion in Polycrystals
• Stronger - grain boundaries
s
pin deformations
• Slip planes & directions
(l, f) change from one
crystal to another.
• tR will vary from one
crystal to another.
• The crystal with the
largest tR yields first.
• Other (less favorably
oriented) crystals
300 mm
yield later.
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Strategies for Strengthening:
1: Reduce Grain Size
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Strategies for Strengthening:
2: Solid Solutions
A C
B D
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Strengthening by Alloying
• small impurities tend to concentrate at dislocations
• reduce mobility of dislocation increase strength
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Strengthening by alloying
• large impurities concentrate at dislocations on low
density side
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Ex: Solid Solution
Strengthening in Copper
• Tensile strength & yield strength increase with wt% Ni.
Tensile strength (MPa)
180
200 60
0 10 20 30 40 50 0 10 20 30 40 50
wt.% Ni, (Concentration C) wt.%Ni, (Concentration C)
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Strategies for Strengthening:
3: Cold Work (%CW)
• Room temperature deformation.
• Common forming operations change the cross
sectional area:
-Forging force -Rolling
roll
die Ad
A o blank Ad Ao
roll
• Dislocations entangle
with one another
during cold work.
• Dislocation motion
becomes more difficult.
0.9 mm
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Effects of Stress at Dislocations
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Result of Cold Work
total dislocation length
Dislocation density =
unit volume
– Carefully grown single crystal
ca. 103 mm-2
– Deforming sample increases density
109-1010 mm-2
– Heat treatment reduces density
105-106 mm-2
s
• Yield stress increases
sy1 large hardening
as rd increases: sy0 small hardening
e
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Impact of Cold Work
As cold work is increased
• Yield strength (sy) increases.
• Tensile strength (TS) increases.
• Ductility (%EL or %AR) decreases.
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Effect of Heating After %CW
• 1 hour treatment at Tanneal...
decreases TS and increases %EL.
• Effects of cold work are reversed!
annealing temperature (ºC)
100 200 300 400 500 600 700
tensile strength (MPa)
600 60
tensile strength
ductility (%EL)
50
500
• 3 Annealing
40
stages to
400 30 discuss...
ductility 20
300
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Recovery
Annihilation reduces dislocation density.
extra half-plane
of atoms Dislocations
Results from annihilate
diffusion atoms
and form
diffuse
a perfect
to regions
atomic
of tension
plane.
extra half-plane
of atoms
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Recrystallization
• New grains are formed that:
-- have a small dislocation density
-- are small
-- consume cold-worked grains.
0.6 mm 0.6 mm
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Further Recrystallization
• All cold-worked grains are consumed.
0.6 mm 0.6 mm
After 4 After 8
seconds seconds
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Grain Growth
• At longer times, larger grains consume smaller ones.
• Why? Grain boundary area (and therefore energy)
is reduced.
0.6 mm 0.6 mm
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Coldwork Calculations
A cylindrical rod of brass originally 0.40 in (10.2 mm)
in diameter is to be cold worked by drawing. The
circular cross section will be maintained during
deformation. A cold-worked tensile strength in excess
of 55,000 psi (380 MPa) and a ductility of at least 15
%EL are desired. Further more, the final diameter
must be 0.30 in (7.6 mm). Explain how this may be
accomplished.
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Coldwork Calculations Solution
If we directly draw to the final diameter
what happens?
Brass
Cold
Work
Do = 0.40 in Df = 0.30 in
Ao Af Af
%CW x 100 1 x 100
Ao Ao
Df 4
2 0.30
2
1
x 100 1 x 100 43 .8%
Do 4
0.40
2
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Coldwork Calc Solution: Cont.
420 540
– sy = 420 MPa
– TS = 540 MPa > 380 MPa
– %EL = 6 < 15
• This doesn’t satisfy criteria…… what can we do?
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Coldwork Calc Solution: Cont.
380 15
12 27
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Coldwork Calc Soln: Recrystallization
Cold draw-anneal-cold draw again
• For objective we need a cold work of %CW 12-27
– We’ll use %CW = 20
• Diameter after first cold draw (before 2nd cold draw)?
– must be calculated as follows:
Df 2 2 Df 2
2
%CW
%CW 1
2
x 100 1 2
D02 D02
100
Df 2 %CW
0 .5 Df 2
1 D02
%CW
0. 5
D02 100 1
100
0.5
20
Intermediate diameter = D f 1 D02 0.30 1 0.335 in
100
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Coldwork Calculations Solution
Summary:
1. Cold work D01= 0.40 in Df1 = 0.335 in
2
%CW1 1
0.335
x 100 30
0.4
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Summary
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