About this Abstract |
Meeting |
MS&T23: Materials Science & Technology
|
Symposium
|
Integration between Modeling and Experiments for Crystalline Metals: From Atomistic to Macroscopic Scales V
|
Presentation Title |
Quantifying the Role of Coarse Intermetallic Particles on Twinning Behavior |
Author(s) |
Benjamin Anthony, Victoria M. Miller |
On-Site Speaker (Planned) |
Victoria M. Miller |
Abstract Scope |
Deformation twinning is a mechanism of critical interest in magnesium alloys and other HCP metals, both due to its ability to accommodate strain and its
tendency to contribute to failure by providing a preferential crack pathway
along twin boundaries. This deleterious behavior is worsened by instances of twin transmission, where a twin impinging on a grain boundary nucleates an adjacent, connected twin in the neighboring grain due to intense local stresses. Many commercial Mg alloys feature coarse grain boundary intermetallic particles in their as-produced state which potentially impede or exacerbate the localized stresses that play a role in both twin transmission and twinning behavior. Combined EDS-EBSD is used to analyze grain boundary particles, deformation twins, and transmission events to determine how particle morphology, position, and grain orientation modify twinning behavior and transmission likelihood, and how these findings compare to computational results from Crystal Plasticity – Fast Fourier Transform modeling. |