Void nucleation and cracking at grain boundaries
β Scribed by P. Shewmon; P. Anderson
- Publisher
- Elsevier Science
- Year
- 1998
- Tongue
- English
- Weight
- 480 KB
- Volume
- 46
- Category
- Article
- ISSN
- 1359-6454
No coin nor oath required. For personal study only.
β¦ Synopsis
AbstractΓDimpled grain boundary fracture occurs in creep tests, stress relief cracking and hydrogen attack of steels. While the growth of these voids by grain boundary diusion is well established, the mode of void nucleation is uncertain. It is shown that the reduction of surface energy by solute adsorption plays an essential role in giving easy void nucleation. A calculation is given for the stress needed for this mode of nucleation using data for phosphorous in steel. Numerous examples exist of strongly adsorbing solute inducing elevated temperature grain boundary cracking. A row of voids growing by stress driven boundary diusion is shown to develop a tensile stress maximum which aids void nucleation, giving rise to dimpled grain boundary fracture. Our cracking model involves repeated void nucleation and is thus fundamentally dierent from the steady-state HullΒ±Rimmer model. At times and temperatures too low for void formation, adsorption can lead to smooth grain boundary cracking at a rate controlled by solute diusion (adsorption).
π SIMILAR VOLUMES
The cracking of grain boundary facets in polycrystalline materials showing anisotropic thermal expansion behaviour is controlled by several microstructural factors in addition to the intrinsic thermal and elastic properties. Of specific interest are the relative orientation of the two grains meeting
Some of the problems of using high spatial resolution microanalysis in the vicinity of particles and voids in metal grain boundaries are discussed. New analytical results are presented for nickel based alloys, which suggest that elemental distributions in the region immediately adjacent to growing g