Technical Papers and Discussions - Stainless Steel and Iron-silicon Alloys - Some Aspects of Crystal Recovery in Silicon Ferrite Following Plastic Strains (Metals Tech., Aug. 1946, T. P. 1991)

The American Institute of Mining, Metallurgical, and Petroleum Engineers
C. G. Dunn
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The American Institute of Mining, Metallurgical, and Petroleum Engineers
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22
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1616 KB
Publication Date:
Jan 1, 1947

Abstract

It is well known that plastic deformation alters many of the properties of a metal and subsequent heat-treatment partially or completely restores these properties.l In the deformed or strained state, the metal is unstable and tends to change toward a condition called a "strain-free state." The transformation occurs through recovery, recrystallization, and grain growth—processes that may take place singly or in combination. The distortion of the lattice of an individual grain of a metal in a state of strain may be rather complex in nature, because plastic deformation produces: (I) dislocations within mosaic blocks; (2) elastic variations of the lattice spacings; and (3) gross alterations throughout the lattice, especially along slip planes, along composition planes between a grain and its mechanical twins, and along boundaries of deformation bands. These gross alterations are of the nature of bent planes or rotated regions of the crystal lattice and are revealed by a spread in the orientation of the grain. Although we cannot describe these strains and their formation accurately because of insuffcient knowledge, we can, nevertheless, use the information as well as possible to obtain a better understanding of recovery processes. In recovery, the lattice of a grain is not made anew as it is in recrystallization, but is improved or mended in such a way that the basic structure remains unaltered: Until recatly observations were .that recovery produced no marked changes in the shapes of spots in Laue diffraction patterns, whereas recrystallization did, but now it is known for silicon ferrite2 that Laue spots may become quite sharp entirely through recovery. Consequently, the shape of Laue spots alone would not be a suitable test to distinguish between recovery and recrystallization. There is considerable evidence that the micro-structure usually does not change visibly during recovery. Absence of a visible change in the microstructure, therefore, provides a sufficient test of recovery in many cases. However, including this observation in a definition of recovery as a necessary condition (this is usually done) is unfortunate, because recovery may, as will become evident later, produce new grain boundaries that are visible not only in the microstructure but also in the macrostructure. For the present, therefore, let us say that a necessary condition for a process to be one of recovery is that the principal orientation or orientations of a deformed grain be essentially unchanged throughout the transformation toward the strain-free state. Several transformations may occur that fulfill this condition, and the nature of the distortion in a grain indicates what these must be if the lattice is to be mended in part or fully. Consequently, it will be convenient as well as
Citation

APA: C. G. Dunn  (1947)  Technical Papers and Discussions - Stainless Steel and Iron-silicon Alloys - Some Aspects of Crystal Recovery in Silicon Ferrite Following Plastic Strains (Metals Tech., Aug. 1946, T. P. 1991)

MLA: C. G. Dunn Technical Papers and Discussions - Stainless Steel and Iron-silicon Alloys - Some Aspects of Crystal Recovery in Silicon Ferrite Following Plastic Strains (Metals Tech., Aug. 1946, T. P. 1991). The American Institute of Mining, Metallurgical, and Petroleum Engineers, 1947.

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