scholarly journals Evaluation of the Effect of Initial Texture on the Development of Deformation Texture

1986 ◽  
Vol 6 (4) ◽  
pp. 231-263 ◽  
Author(s):  
T. Leffers ◽  
D. Juul Jensen

We describe a computer procedure which allows us to introduce experimental initial textures as starting conditions for texture simulation (instead of a theoretical random texture). We apply the procedure on two batches of copper with weak initial textures and on fine-grained and coarse-grained aluminium with moderately strong initial textures. In copper the initial texture turns out to be too weak to have any significant effect. In aluminium the initial texture has a very significant effect on the simulated textures—similar to the effect it has on the experimental textures. However, there are differences between the simulated and the experimental aluminium textures that can only be explained as a grain-size effect. Possible future applications of the procedure are discussed.

2016 ◽  
Vol 850 ◽  
pp. 857-863 ◽  
Author(s):  
Yao Jiang ◽  
Jing Tao Wang ◽  
Yue Wang ◽  
Jian Yin

Cold rolling (CR) was conducted on coarse grained (CG) and ultrafine-grained (UFG) coppers, obtained by 1 and 8 passes in the equal channel angel pressing (ECAP), to investigate the effect of grain size on rolling texture. The microstructure was refined to UFG (~420 nm) with the ECAP pass increased to 8, while only band-like CG microstructure was observed in the 1 pass processed copper. The influence of the texture before CR could be excluded as the crystallographic texture kept similar for different ECAP pass. Pole figures (PFs) showed that the shear texture introduced by ECAP was replaced by rolling texture after CR. Furthermore, the rolling texture was a kind of classical copper-type for the CG copper, while a brass-type rolling texture was observed in the UFG copper. TEM results confirmed that the deformation nanotwins were only observed in the UFG copper, while the microstructure of CG copper was further compressed and subdivided. It indicated that the observed differences in rolling texture component and density might be contributed to the grain size effect which resulted in different deformation mechanism and grain subdivision behavior.


Metals ◽  
2019 ◽  
Vol 9 (7) ◽  
pp. 734 ◽  
Author(s):  
Lin Xie ◽  
Chunpeng Wang ◽  
Yuhui Wang ◽  
Guilin Wu ◽  
Xiaoxu Huang

An Fe-23Cr-8.5Ni alloy was used as a model material to study the grain size effect on the mechanical behavior of metastable duplex metal. Alloy samples with different grain sizes ranging from 0.1 to 2 μm were prepared by cold-rolling and annealing. A structural refinement to about 0.1 μm results in a high yield strength but very limited ductility. A significant improvement of ductility occurred at the grain size of about 0.4 μm. A further increase in grain size results in a decreased strength and a slightly improved ductility. The alloy with a grain size of about 0.4 μm exhibits an excellent combination of strength and ductility, where the yield strength and tensile elongation are increased up to 738 MPa and 29% as compared to 320 MPa and 33% of a coarse-grained (about 2 μm) sample, respectively. The origin of the excellent mechanical properties was attributed to the unique deformation characteristics associated with the transformation induced plasticity and the development of back stress.


2016 ◽  
Vol 723 ◽  
pp. 207-213
Author(s):  
You Juan Ma ◽  
Xiao Wang ◽  
Qing Qian ◽  
Zong Bao Shen

The occurrence of size effects in the microforming leads to the uncertainties in process determination and quality control. In this research, a series of experiments were conducted in UTM4104 testing machine to investigate the grain size effect and feature size effect in micro-bending. Different grain size (d), thickness to grain size ratio () and micro-mold feature size (W) were prepared to explore size effects on formability of copper foil. The formability characterized by forming depth, deformation uniformity and surface integrity was discussed. It was found that the normalized forming depth presented a gradually rise and then declined markedly when N value further decreased to 0.79. The ductile fracture mode was observed for all grain-sized workpiece and the corresponding limit forming depth decreased with increasing grain size. Besides, the thickness thinning distribution and microhardness distribution showed the similar variation tendency like M. Both the standard deviation of thickness reduction and the roughed degree of surface topography indicated the worsening deformation uniformity of the foils with a larger grain size. The inhomogeneous plastic flow of material may be the reason to explain the depression near fracture location which is only observed in coarse-grained workpiece. Overall, it is concluded that the fine-grained copper exhibited better formability as the coarse-grained workpiece experienced severe strain incompatibility.


1975 ◽  
Vol 12 (8) ◽  
pp. 1346-1361 ◽  
Author(s):  
Roger M. Slatt

Surficial palimpsest sediments in Halls Bay, north-central Newfoundland, are mixtures of gravel, sand, and mud deposited from a number of sources in varying quantities from late Wisconsinan to the present time. Shallow water gravel originated as till and glacio-fluvial outwash. Gravel in deep water probably is ice-rafted. Sand and mud, which occurs with shallow water gravel and in deeper water, is a combination of fluvial material and material winnowed out of till and outwash by shallow water waves and currents during early marine transgression. There also may be a contribution of fine-grained sediment from the adjacent shelf.Gravel (coarser than [Formula: see text]), very fine sand (3 to [Formula: see text]) and coarse silt (4 to [Formula: see text]) modal grain-size classes predominate in the sediments. The very fine sand mode occurs on the west side of the inlet and the coarse silt mode occurs on the east side regardless of water depth, indicating net or active easterly dispersal of fine-grained sediment. This dispersal path may result from the presence in Halls Bay of a counterclockwise gyre of the Labrador Current that has developed since early transgression, which suggests the sediment surface is adjusting to the Halls Bay modern hydraulic regime.Sandy and muddy sediments are composed of quartz, feldspar, amphibole, illite, chlorite, montmorillonite, organic matter, CaCO3, and FeS. Major, minor, and trace element concentrations vary with grain-size, owing to the different proportions of these components in different size fractions. Calculation of an average chemical composition of sediments is biased because of this grain-size effect. The grain-size effect on chemistry of a suite of sediments can be accounted for by ratioing element concentrations to clay content.Plots of the ratio trace metal concentration/clay content vs. clay content for six trace metals indicate anomalous Cu concentrations occur in surface sediments along the east side of Halls Bay in the direction of fine-grained sediment dispersal. The anomalous Cu is derived from onshore mineralization in Lushs Bight Group volcanic rocks, which Occur along the west side of the inlet.The results provide an example of the applicability of marine sedimentologic/sedimentary geochemical investigations to mineral exploration. Local geochemical anomalies in sediments can be detected by routine analysis of total metal content of bulk samples provided the grain-size effect on chemistry is accounted for. The anomalous metal can be traced to its onshore source by evaluating sediment dispersal paths from textural variations.


2020 ◽  
Author(s):  
Kum-Ok Jang ◽  
Il-Hwan Kim ◽  
Il-Hun Kim ◽  
Kye-Ryong Sin ◽  
Chol-Jin Kim

2021 ◽  
Vol 83 (4) ◽  
Author(s):  
S. Adam Soule ◽  
Michael Zoeller ◽  
Carolyn Parcheta

AbstractHawaiian and other ocean island lava flows that reach the coastline can deposit significant volumes of lava in submarine deltas. The catastrophic collapse of these deltas represents one of the most significant, but least predictable, volcanic hazards at ocean islands. The volume of lava deposited below sea level in delta-forming eruptions and the mechanisms of delta construction and destruction are rarely documented. Here, we report on bathymetric surveys and ROV observations following the Kīlauea 2018 eruption that, along with a comparison to the deltas formed at Pu‘u ‘Ō‘ō over the past decade, provide new insight into delta formation. Bathymetric differencing reveals that the 2018 deltas contain more than half of the total volume of lava erupted. In addition, we find that the 2018 deltas are comprised largely of coarse-grained volcanic breccias and intact lava flows, which contrast with those at Pu‘u ‘Ō‘ō that contain a large fraction of fine-grained hyaloclastite. We attribute this difference to less efficient fragmentation of the 2018 ‘a‘ā flows leading to fragmentation by collapse rather than hydrovolcanic explosion. We suggest a mechanistic model where the characteristic grain size influences the form and stability of the delta with fine grain size deltas (Pu‘u ‘Ō‘ō) experiencing larger landslides with greater run-out supported by increased pore pressure and with coarse grain size deltas (Kīlauea 2018) experiencing smaller landslides that quickly stop as the pore pressure rapidly dissipates. This difference, if validated for other lava deltas, would provide a means to assess potential delta stability in future eruptions.


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