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Deformation and
Strengthening
Mechanisms
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Dislocation Motion
Dislocation motion leads to plastic deformation.
An edge dislocation moves in response to a shear stress applied in a
direction perpendicular to its line.
Extra half-plane at A is forced to the right; this pushes the top halves
of planes B, C, D in the same direction.
By discrete steps, the extra 1/2-plane moves from L to R by
successive breaking of bonds and shifting of upper 1/2-planes.
A step forms on the surface of the crystal as the extra 1/2-plane
exits.
Formation
of a step
on the
surface of
a crystal by
the motion
of (a) edge
dislocation
and (b)
screw
dislocation.
Slip
Slip Systems
Dislocations move more easily on specific planes and in
specific directions.
Ordinarily, there is a preferred plane (slip plane), and
specific directions (slip direction) along which dislocations
move.
The combination of slip plane and slip direction is called
the slip system.
The slip system depends on the crystal structure of the
metal.
The slip plane is the plane that has the most dense
atomic packing (the greatest planar density).
The slip direction is most closely packed with atoms
(highest linear density).
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tR cos cos
12
t R cos cos
13
300 mm
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Deformation by Twinning
Strengthening
The ability of a metal to deform plastically
depends on the ability of dislocations to move.
Hardness and strength are related to how
easily a metal plastically deforms, so, by
reducing dislocation movement, the mechanical
strength can be improved.
Greater mechanical forces will be required to
initiate further plastic deformation.
To the contrary, if dislocation movement is easy
(unhindered), the metal will be soft, easy to
deform.
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Strengthening Mechanisms
1. Grain Size Reduction
2. Solid Solution Alloying
3. Strain Hardening (Cold Working)
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2. Solid Solutions
Impurity atoms distort the lattice & generate stress.
Stress can produce a barrier to dislocation motion.
Smaller substitutional impurity
3. Strain Hardening
Room temperature deformation.
Common forming techniques used to
change the cross sectional area:
-Forging
force
die
Ao blank
Ao Ad
%CW
x100
Ao
-Rolling
Ad
force
-Drawing
die
Ao
-Extrusion
Ad
tensile
force
die
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OR
r N
d
A
Area , A dislocation
pit
N dislocation
pits (revealed
by etching)
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%CW
Ao Ad
x100
Ao
ro2 r d2
ro2
x100 35.6%
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Anisotropy - Polycrystals
rolling
direction
Grains are
elongated
before rolling
after rolling
Isotropic
Anisotropic (directional)
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Recovery
During recovery, some of the stored internal strain energy
is relieved through dislocation motion due to enhanced
atomic diffusion at the elevated temperatures.
There is some reduction in the number of dislocations.
Physical properties (electrical and thermal conductivity)
are recovered to their pre-cold worked states.
Annihilation reduces dislocation density.
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Recrystallization
Even after recovery is complete, the grains are
still in a relatively high strain energy state.
Recrystallization is the formation of a new set of
strain-free and equiaxed grains that have low
dislocation densities (pre-cold work state).
The driving force to produce the new grain
structure is the internal energy difference between
strained and unstrained material.
The new grains form as very small nuclei and
grow until they consume the parent material.
Recrystallization temperature is 1/3 <Tm <1/2.
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Further Recrystallization
Brass: shows several stages of recrystallization and
grain growth.
33% CW grains
Complete recryst.
after 8 seconds
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GRAIN GROWTH
After recrystallization is
complete, the strain-free
grains will continue to
grow if the metal
specimen is left at
elevated temperatures.
As grains increase in size,
the total boundary area
decreases, as does the
total energy.
Large grains grow at the
expense of smaller grains.
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