Chapter 8:
Deformation and
Strengthening
Mechanisms
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Deformation and Strengthening
Mechanisms
Plastic deformation caused by
dislocation movement.
Slip systems (slip plane, slip direction).
Resolved Shear Stress
Strengthening Mechanisms
Recovery, Recrystallization, Grain
Growth
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Deformation Mechanisms (Metals)
Theoretical strengths of perfect crystal were
much higher than those actually measured.
It was believed that this discrepancy in
mechanical strength could be explained by
dislocations.
On a macroscopic scale, plastic deformation
corresponds to the net movement of large
numbers of atoms in response to an applied
stress.
Interatomic bonds rupturing and reforming.3
Edge and Screw Dislocations
In an edge dislocation, localized lattice
distortion exists along the end of an extra
half-plane of atoms.
A screw dislocation results from shear
distortion.
Many dislocations in crystalline materials
have both edge and screws components;
these are mixed dislocations.
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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
The process by which plastic deformation is
produced by dislocation motion is called slip
(movement of dislocations).
The extra -plane moves along the slip plane.
Dislocation movement is similar to the way a
caterpillar moves. The caterpillar hump is
representative of the extra -plane of atoms.
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When metals are plastically deformed, some fraction (roughly 5%)
of energy is retained internally; the remainder is dissipated as heat.
Mainly, this energy is stored as strain energy associated with
dislocations. Lattice distortions exist around the dislocation line.
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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Slip System FCC example
Slip Plane {111}:
most dense atomic packing,
Slip Direction 110:
highest linear density, 10
Stress and Dislocation Motion
Edge and screw dislocations move in
response to shear stresses applied along a
slip plane in a slip direction.
Even though an applied stress may be
tensile, shear components exist at all but
the parallel or perpendicular alignments to
the stress direction.
These are resolved shear stresses (tR).
Crystals slip due to resolved shear stress.
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Resolved Shear Stress, tR
tR cos cos
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Critical Resolved Shear Stress
Condition for dislocation motion: t R tcrss
t R cos cos
In response to an applied tensile or
compressive stress, slip (dislocation movement) in a
single crystal begins when the resolved shear
stress reaches some critical value, tcrss.
It represents the minimum shear stress
required to initiate slip and is a property of the
material that determines when yielding
occurs.
tcrss
y
(cos cos ) m ax
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Deformation in a single crystal
For a single crystal in
tension, slip will occur
along a number of
equivalent and most
favorably oriented planes
and directions at various
positions along the
specimen.
Each step results from the
movement of a large
number of dislocations
along the same slip plane.
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Dislocation Motion in Polycrystals
On the surface of a polished
single crystal, these steps
appear as lines (slip lines).
Slip planes & directions (, )
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 yield later.
Polycrystalline Copper
300 mm
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Deformation by Twinning
In addition to slip (dislocation movement), plastic deformation can
occur by twinning.
A shear force can produce atomic displacements so that on
one side of the plane (the twin boundary), atoms are located
in mirror image positions to atoms on the other side.
Twinning may favorably reorient slip systems to promote 16
dislocation movement.
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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1. REDUCE GRAIN SIZE
Grain boundaries are barriers to slip.
Barrier "strength increases with misorientation.
Smaller grain size: more barriers to slip.
Hall-Petch Equation:
yield o k y d 1/ 2
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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
Impurity generates local shear at A
and B that opposes dislocation
motion to the right.
Larger substitutional impurity
Impurity generates local shear at C
and D that opposes dislocation motion
to the right.
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Solid Solution Strengthening in Copper
Effects of Nickel (solute)
content in Copper (host) Tensile strength (a), Yield
strength (b) and Ductility,
% Elongation (c).
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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Dislocations DURING COLD WORK
Ti alloy after cold
working.
Dislocations entangle
one another during
cold work.
Dislocation motion
becomes more difficult.
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Result of Cold Work
Dislocation density (r ) increases:
d
Carefully prepared sample: rd ~ 103 mm/mm3
Heavily deformed sample: rd ~ 1010 mm/mm3
Ways to measure dislocation density:
40mm
OR
r N
d
A
Area , A dislocation
pit
N dislocation
pits (revealed
by etching)
Yield stress increases
as r increases:
d
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Impact of Cold Work
Yield strength (y) increases.
Tensile strength (TS) increases.
Ductility (%EL or %AR) decreases.
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Cold Work Analysis
What is the tensile strength & ductility after cold working?
%CW
%CW
Ao Ad
x100
Ao
ro2 r d2
ro2
x100 35.6%
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Effect of Heating After %CW
The influence
of annealing
temperature (1
hour) on the
tensile strength
and ductility of
a brass alloy.
Grain size is
shown as a
function of
annealing
temperature.
Anisotropy - Polycrystals
rolling
direction
Grains are
elongated
before rolling
after rolling
Isotropic
Anisotropic (directional)
grains are approx. spherical,
equiaxed & randomly oriented.
since rolling affects grain
orientation and shape.
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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
Initial recrystallization; Partial
replacement of
After 3 seconds,
CW grains;
580C
After 4 seconds
Complete recryst.
after 8 seconds
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Recrystallization with temperature vs %CW for iron. For
deformations less than 5% CW, recrystallization will not occur.
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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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Grain diameter versus time for grain growth at specific
temperatures (log scale). Brass Alloy example
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