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  • About
  • The Global ETD Search service is a free service for researchers to find electronic theses and dissertations. This service is provided by the Networked Digital Library of Theses and Dissertations.
    Our metadata is collected from universities around the world. If you manage a university/consortium/country archive and want to be added, details can be found on the NDLTD website.
1

ADHESION ENHANCEMENT OF DIAMOND AND DIAMOND-LIKE CARBON THIN FILMS ON TITANIUM ALLOY

2014 May 1900 (has links)
Titanium (Ti) and its alloys have been widely used in aerospace, biomedical, chemical processing, marine facilities, and sports equipment because of their low density, very high tensile strength and toughness, and high corrosion resistance. However, the poor tribological properties has been a major problem and limited their widespread applications. Deposition of wear/corrosion resistant diamond-like carbon (DLC) coatings on Ti alloys is promising to significantly enhance the durability and service performances of these materials. However, the adhesion between DLC coatings and Ti alloy substrates is too weak to meet the application requirements. Up to now, approaches including optimization of deposition conditions, surface treatment of the substrate, deposition of an interlayer, and incorporation of metallic or nonmetallic elements have been used for adhesion enhancement of DLC on Ti alloys. In this research, a new method, nanodiamond particles incorporation, was developed for adhesion enhancement of DLC coatings on Ti alloys. In order to achieve high diamond nucleation without damaging the Ti alloy, nucleation enhancement of diamond on Ti alloys by nanodiamond seeding, tungsten (W) interlayers, and high methane concentration were studied. Diamond, DLC and W deposition were carried out by microwave assisted chemical vapor deposition, direct ion beam deposition and hot filament assisted chemical vapor deposition, respectively. Scanning electron microscopy, Atomic force microscopy, X-ray diffraction, Raman spectroscopy and synchrotron-based near edge extended X-ray absorption fine structure spectroscopy were used to characterize the microstructure and chemical bonding of the as-deposited particles and films, and indentation testing was used to evaluate the adhesion of the as-deposited coatings. By nanodiamond seeding or applying a W interlayer, significantly enhanced diamond nucleation has been obtained on Ti alloys, and consequently high quality nanocrystalline diamond thin films have been obtained on Ti alloys at decreased deposition temperature and reduced deposition time, which mitigates the deterioration of Ti alloy substrates due to hydrogen diffusion during diamond deposition and also enhances the adhesion of diamond on Ti alloys. Based on these results, nanodiamond particles (NDP) with high nucleation density and high adhesion were deposited on Ti alloys initially to enhance the adhesion of DLC films on Ti alloys. Results show that the pre-deposited NDP can significantly increase the adhesion of DLC on Ti6Al4V, probably due to the increased interfacial bonding, mechanical interlocking, and stress relief by the incorporation of NDP into DLC to form NDP/DLC composite films.
2

Surface Modifications to Enhance the Wear Resistance and the Osseo-integration Properties of Biomedical Ti-alloy

Kami, Pavani 08 1900 (has links)
The current study focuses on improving the wear resistance of femoral head component and enhancing the osseo-integration properties of femoral stem component of a hip implant made of a new generation low modulus alloy, Ti-35Nb-7Zr-5Ta or TNZT. Different techniques that were adopted to improve the wear resistance of low-modulus TNZT alloy included; (a) fabrication of graded TNZT-xB (x= 0, 1, 2 wt%) samples using LENS, (b) oxidation, and (c) LASER nitriding of TNZT. TNZT-1B and TNZT-O samples have shown improved wear resistance when tested against UHMWPE ball in SBF medium. A new class of bio-ceramic coatings based on calcium phosphate (CaP), was applied on the TNZT sample surface and was further laser processed with the objective of enhancing their osseo-integration properties. With optimized LASER parameters, TNZT-CaP samples have shown improved corrosion resistance, surface wettability and cellular response when compared to the base TNZT sample.
3

Characterization of deformation mechanisms in pre-strained NiAl-Mo composites and α-Ti alloy

Kwon, Jonghan 28 August 2012 (has links)
No description available.
4

Structural properties, deformation behavior and thermal stability of martensitic Ti-Nb alloys

Bönisch, Matthias 09 August 2016 (has links) (PDF)
Ti-Nb alloys are characterized by a diverse metallurgy which allows obtaining a wide palette of microstructural configurations and physical properties via careful selection of chemical composition, heat treatment and mechanical processing routes. The present work aims to expand the current state of knowledge about martensite forming Ti-Nb alloys by studying 15 binary Ti-c_{Nb}Nb (9wt.% ≤ c_{Nb} ≤ 44.5wt.%) alloy formulations in terms of their structural and mechanical properties, as well as their thermal stability. The crystal structures of the martensitic phases, α´ and α´´, and the influence of the Nb content on the lattice (Bain) strain and on the volume change related to the β → α´/α´´ martensitic transformations are analyzed on the basis of Rietveld-refinements. The magnitude of the shuffle component of the β → α´/α´´ martensitic transformations is quantified in relation to the chemical composition. The largest transformation lattice strains are operative in Nb-lean alloys. Depending on the composition, both a volume dilatation and contraction are encountered and the volume change may influence whether hexagonal martensite α´ or orthorhombic martensite α´´ forms from β upon quenching. The mechanical properties and the deformation behavior of martensitic Ti-Nb alloys are studied by complementary methods including monotonic and cyclic uniaxial compression, nanoindentation, microhardness and impulse excitation technique. The results show that the Nb content strongly influences the mechanical properties of martensitic Ti-Nb alloys. The elastic moduli, hardness and strength are minimal in the vicinity of the limiting compositions bounding the interval in which orthorhombic martensite α´´ forms by quenching. Uniaxial cyclic compressive testing demonstrates that the elastic properties of strained samples are different than those of unstrained ones. Also, experimental evidence indicates a deformation-induced martensite to austenite (α´´ → β) conversion. The influence of Nb content on the thermal stability and on the occurrence of decomposition reactions in martensitic Ti-Nb alloys is examined by isochronal differential scanning calorimetry, dilatometry and in-situ synchrotron X-ray diffraction complemented by transmission electron microscopy. The thermal decomposition and transformation behavior exhibits various phase transformation sequences during heating into the β-phase field in dependence of composition. Eventually, the transformation temperatures, interval, hysteresis and heat of the β ↔ α´´ martensitic transformation are investigated in relation to the Nb content. The results obtained in this study are useful for the development and optimization of β-stabilized Ti-based alloys for structural, Ni-free shape memory and/or superelastic, as well as for biomedical applications. / Ti-Nb Legierungen zeichnen sich durch eine vielfältige Metallurgie aus, die es nach sorgfältiger Auswahl der chemischen Zusammensetzung sowie der thermischen und mechanischen Prozessierungsroute ermöglicht eine große Bandbreite mikrostruktureller Konfigurationen und physikalischer Eigenschaften zu erhalten. Das Ziel der vorliegenden Arbeit ist es den gegenwärtigen Wissensstand über martensitbildende Ti-Nb Legierungen zu erweitern. Zu diesem Zweck werden 15 binäre Ti-c_{Nb} Nb (9 Gew.% ≤ c_{Nb} ≤ 44.5 Gew.%) Legierungen hinsichtlich ihrer strukturellen und mechanischen Eigenschaften sowie ihrer thermischen Stabilität untersucht. Die Kristallstrukturen der martensitischen Phasen, α´ und α´´, sowie der Einfluss des Nb-Gehalts auf die Gitterverzerrung (Bain-Verzerrung), auf die Verschiebungswellenkomponente (Shuffle-Komponente) und auf die Volumenänderung der martensitischen β → α´/α´´ Transformationen werden anhand von Rietveld-Verfeinerungen analysiert. In Abhängigkeit des Nb-Gehalts tritt entweder eine Volumendilatation oder -kontraktion auf, die bestimmen könnte ob hexagonaler Martensit α´ oder orthorhombischer Martensit α´´ aus β bei Abkühlung gebildet wird. Die mechanischen Eigenschaften und das Verformungsverhalten martensitischer Ti-Nb Legierungen werden mit einer Reihe komplementärer Methoden (monotone und zyklische einachsige Druckversuche, Nanoindentation, Mikrohärte, Impulserregungstechnik) untersucht. Die Ergebnisse zeigen durchgehend, dass die mechanischen Eigenschaften martensitischer Ti-Nb Legierungen stark vom Nb-Gehalt beeinflusst werden. Die mechanischen Kennwerte sind minimal in der Nähe der Zusammensetzungen, innerhalb derer β → α´´ bei Abkühlung auftritt. Aus Druckversuchen geht hervor, dass die elastischen Eigenschaften verformter Proben verschieden zu denen unverformter sind. Die experimentellen Ergebnisse weisen außerdem auf eine verformungsinduzierte Umwandlung von Martensit in Austenit (α´´ → β) hin. Der Einfluss des Nb-Gehalts auf die thermische Stabilität und das Auftreten von Zerfallsreaktionen in martensitischen Ti-Nb Legierungen wird anhand von dynamischer Differenzkalorimetrie, Dilatometrie, und in-situ Synchrotronröntgenbeugung in Kombination mit Transmissionselektronenmikroskopie untersucht. Das thermische Zerfalls- und Umwandlungsverhalten ist durch das Auftreten einer Vielzahl von in Abhängigkeit des Nb-Gehalts unterschiedlichen Phasentransformationssequenzen gekennzeichnet. Abschließend werden die Transformationstemperaturen und -wärmen, das Transformationsinterval und die thermische Hysterese der martensitischen β ↔ α´´ Umwandlung untersucht. Die Ergebnisse dieser Arbeit sind für die Entwicklung und Optimierung β-stabilisierter Ti-Legierungen für strukturelle und biomedizinische Anwendungen sowie Ni-freier Komponenten, die Formgedächtniseffekt und/oder Superelastizität aufweisen, von Nutzen.
5

Enhanced gradient crystal-plasticity study of size effects in B.C.C. metal

Demiral, Murat January 2012 (has links)
Owing to continuous miniaturization, many modern high-technology applications such as medical and optical devices, thermal barrier coatings, electronics, micro- and nano-electro mechanical systems (MEMS and NEMS), gems industry and semiconductors increasingly use components with sizes down to a few micrometers and even smaller. Understanding their deformation mechanisms and assessing their mechanical performance help to achieve new insights or design new material systems with superior properties through controlled microstructure at the appropriate scales. However, a fundamental understanding of mechanical response in surface-dominated structures, different than their bulk behaviours, is still elusive. In this thesis, the size effect in a single-crystal Ti alloy (Ti15V3Cr3Al3Sn) is investigated. To achieve this, nanoindentation and micropillar (with a square cross-section) compression tests were carried out in collaboration with Swiss Federal Laboratories for Materials Testing and Research (EMPA), Switzerland. Three-dimensional finite element models of compression and indentation with an implicit time-integration scheme incorporating a strain-gradient crystal-plasticity (SGCP) theory were developed to accurately represent deformation of the studied body-centered cubic metallic material. An appropriate hardening model was implemented to account for strain-hardening of the active slip systems, determined experimentally. The optimized set of parameters characterizing the deformation behaviour of Ti alloy was obtained based on a direct comparison of simulations and the experiments. An enhanced model based on the SGCP theory (EMSGCP), accounting for an initial microstructure of samples in terms of different types of dislocations (statistically stored and geometrically necessary dislocations), was suggested and used in the numerical analysis. This meso-scale continuum theory bridges the gap between the discrete-dislocation dynamics theory, where simulations are performed at strain rates several orders of magnitude higher than those in experiments, and the classical continuum-plasticity theory, which cannot explain the dependence of mechanical response on a specimen s size since there is no length scale in its constitutive description. A case study was performed using a cylindrical pillar to examine, on the one hand, accuracy of the proposed EMSGCP theory and, on the other hand, its universality for different pillar geometries. An extensive numerical study of the size effect in micron-size pillars was also implemented. On the other hand, an anisotropic character of surface topographies around indents along different crystallographic orientations of single crystals obtained in numerical simulations was compared to experimental findings. The size effect in nano-indentation was studied numerically. The differences in the observed hardness values for various indenter types were investigated using the developed EMSGCP theory.
6

Studium fázových transformací ve slitinách Ti / Studium fázových transformací ve slitinách Ti

Zháňal, Pavel January 2014 (has links)
In this work phase transformations in metastable β Ti-15Mo alloy were studied using electrical resistivity measurements. The alloy was subjected to a solution treatment at a temperature higher than β- transus and quenched in water. In this condition, the microstructure of Ti-15Mo alloy consists of a metastable β - matrix and ω-phase particles. During in-situ electrical resistivity measurement in a specially designed furnace, significant temperature points which indicate phase transformations in the material were detected. The dependence of electrical resistivity on the temperature changes during heating between increasing and decreasing according to the ongoing phase transformation. The changes were observed at temperatures 225, 356 and 560 řC. A further study of these phase transformations using electrical resistivity measurements was performed on various heat treated specimens. In order to control the microstructure evolution in the material, scanning and transmission electron microscopy was used. Mechanical properties were studied using Vickers microhardness testing. The obtained results serve to identify the type and sequence of phase transformations which take place in the Ti-15Mo alloy. Powered by TCPDF (www.tcpdf.org)
7

EXPERIMENTALLY VALIDATED CRYSTAL PLASTICITY MODELING OF TITANIUM ALLOYS AT MULTIPLE LENGTH-SCALES BASED ON MATERIAL CHARACTERIZATION, ACCOUNTING FOR RESIDUAL STRESSES

Kartik Kapoor (7543412) 30 October 2019 (has links)
<p>There is a growing need to understand the deformation mechanisms in titanium alloys due to their widespread use in the aerospace industry (especially within gas turbine engines), variation in their properties and performance based on their microstructure, and their tendency to undergo premature failure due to dwell and high cycle fatigue well below their yield strength. Crystal plasticity finite element (CPFE) modeling is a popular computational tool used to understand deformation in these polycrystalline alloys. With the advancement in experimental techniques such as electron backscatter diffraction, digital image correlation (DIC) and high-energy x-ray diffraction, more insights into the microstructure of the material and its deformation process can be attained. This research leverages data from a number of experimental techniques to develop well-informed and calibrated CPFE models for titanium alloys at multiple length-scales and use them to further understand the deformation in these alloys.</p> <p>The first part of the research utilizes experimental data from high-energy x-ray diffraction microscopy to initialize grain-level residual stresses and capture the correct grain morphology within CPFE simulations. Further, another method to incorporate the effect of grain-level residual stresses via geometrically necessary dislocations obtained from 2D material characterization is developed and implemented within the CPFE framework. Using this approach, grain level information about residual stresses obtained spatially over the region of interest, directly from the EBSD and high-energy x-ray diffraction microscopy, is utilized as an input to the model.</p> <p>The second part of this research involves calibrating the CPFE model based upon a systematic and detailed optimization routine utilizing experimental data in the form of macroscopic stress-strain curves coupled with lattice strains on different crystallographic planes for the α and β phases, obtained from high energy X-ray diffraction experiments for multiple material pedigrees with varying β volume fractions. This fully calibrated CPFE model is then used to gain a comprehensive understanding of deformation behavior of Ti-6Al-4V, specifically the effect of the relative orientation of the α and β phases within the microstructure.</p> <p>In the final part of this work, large and highly textured regions, referred to as macrozones or microtextured regions (MTRs), with sizes up to several orders of magnitude larger than that of the individual grains, found in dual phase Titanium alloys are modeled using a reduced order simulation strategy. This is done to overcome the computational challenges associated with modeling macrozones. The reduced order model is then used to investigate the strain localization within the microstructure and the effect of varying the misorientation tolerance on the localization of plastic strain within the macrozones.</p>
8

Estabilidade e metaestabilidade de fases em ligas Ti-Nb / Stability and metastability of phases in Ti-Nb alloys

Aleixo, Giorgia Taiacol 16 February 2006 (has links)
Orientadores: Rubens Caram Junior, Conrado Ramos Moreira Afonso / Dissertação (mestrado) - Universidade Estadual de Campinas, Faculdade de Engenharia Mecanica / Made available in DSpace on 2018-08-06T17:14:04Z (GMT). No. of bitstreams: 1 Aleixo_GiorgiaTaiacol_M.pdf: 13698827 bytes, checksum: 10117398b384c5a1eda6c62fbfc74507 (MD5) Previous issue date: 2006 / Resumo: Ligas de titânio formam a classe mais versátil de materiais metálicos utilizados para aplicações biomédicas. As ligas de Ti tipo ß usadas em dispositivos ortopédicos envolve, além de excelentes propriedades como baixa densidade, elevada resistência mecânica e excepcional resistência à corrosão, a biocompatibilidade com elementos de liga, tais como Nb, Ta, Zr e Mo. O objetivo deste trabalho foi analisar a estabilidade e metaestabilidade de fases em ligas tipo ß no sistema Ti-Nb através da verificação da influência do teor de nióbio sob diversas condições de tratamento térmico. Para tanto variou-se a adição de Nb de 5% a 30% em peso na liga, obtendo amostras que foram submetidas a condições distintas de resfriamento a partir do campo ß. Amostras obtidas foram caracterizadas no tocante à microestrutura via microscopia ótica, eletrônica de varredura e de transmissão, difração de raios-X, enquanto o comportamento mecânico foi preliminarmente avaliado através de ensaios de dureza Vickers e de medidas de módulo de elasticidade através de técnicas acústicas. Os resultados obtidos indicam que baixas taxas de resfriamento conduzem à microestrutura de equilíbrio (a+ß) enquanto que altas taxas de resfriamento levaram à formação de estruturas metaestáveis. À medida que o teor de Nb foi incrementado e sob altas taxas de resfriamento, obteve-se, respectivamente, martensita a¿ (hexagonal compacta), martensita a¿ (ortorrômbica), fase ? (trigonal) e finalmente, fase ß metaestável. Em relação ao módulo de elasticidade, observou-se que esse parâmetro decresce entre 0 e 15% de Nb e após este último valor, tal constante elástica se eleva como resultado da precipitação de fase ? bem como da possível alteração de dimensões da estrutura cristalina. As ligas Ti-Nb apresentaram uma variabilidade de microestruturas e propriedades que dependem fortemente da composição e condição de resfriamento / Abstract: Titanium alloys form one of the most versatile classes of metallic materials used for biomedical applications. ß Ti alloys for orthopaedic devices involves, besides excellent properties like low density, high mechanical strength and good corrosion resistance, great biocompatibility with alloying elements, such as Nb, Ta, Zr and Mo. The objective of this work was to analyze the stability and metastability of phases in ß Ti-Nb alloys through the evaluation of the influence of percentage of Nb obtained in different heat treatment conditions. In this way, Nb addition was varied from 5 to 30wt% in Ti-Nb system. Samples were obtained and microstructural characterization was made through optical microscopy, scanning and transmission electron microscopy and X-ray diffraction, while mechanical behavior was primarily evaluated by Vickers hardness and elasticity modulus through acoustic techniques. The results obtained indicate that lower cooling rates resulted in the equilibrium microstructures (a+ß), otherwise higher cooling rates led to formation of metastable structures. As the Nb content was increased and under greater cooling rates, it was obtained, respectively, martensite a¿ (hexagonal closed packed), martensite a¿ (orthorhombic), ? phase (trigonal) and finally, metastable ß phase. Regarding modulus of elasticity it was observed that it decreases as the %Nb increases up to 15% and beyond this percentage the modulus increases due the precipitation of ? phase as well as possible variation of crystalline structure dimensions. Ti-Nb alloys presented a great variety of combinations between microstructures and properties that strongly depends on composition and cooling conditions / Mestrado / Materiais e Processos de Fabricação / Mestre em Engenharia Mecânica
9

Structural properties, deformation behavior and thermal stability of martensitic Ti-Nb alloys

Bönisch, Matthias 10 June 2016 (has links)
Ti-Nb alloys are characterized by a diverse metallurgy which allows obtaining a wide palette of microstructural configurations and physical properties via careful selection of chemical composition, heat treatment and mechanical processing routes. The present work aims to expand the current state of knowledge about martensite forming Ti-Nb alloys by studying 15 binary Ti-c_{Nb}Nb (9wt.% ≤ c_{Nb} ≤ 44.5wt.%) alloy formulations in terms of their structural and mechanical properties, as well as their thermal stability. The crystal structures of the martensitic phases, α´ and α´´, and the influence of the Nb content on the lattice (Bain) strain and on the volume change related to the β → α´/α´´ martensitic transformations are analyzed on the basis of Rietveld-refinements. The magnitude of the shuffle component of the β → α´/α´´ martensitic transformations is quantified in relation to the chemical composition. The largest transformation lattice strains are operative in Nb-lean alloys. Depending on the composition, both a volume dilatation and contraction are encountered and the volume change may influence whether hexagonal martensite α´ or orthorhombic martensite α´´ forms from β upon quenching. The mechanical properties and the deformation behavior of martensitic Ti-Nb alloys are studied by complementary methods including monotonic and cyclic uniaxial compression, nanoindentation, microhardness and impulse excitation technique. The results show that the Nb content strongly influences the mechanical properties of martensitic Ti-Nb alloys. The elastic moduli, hardness and strength are minimal in the vicinity of the limiting compositions bounding the interval in which orthorhombic martensite α´´ forms by quenching. Uniaxial cyclic compressive testing demonstrates that the elastic properties of strained samples are different than those of unstrained ones. Also, experimental evidence indicates a deformation-induced martensite to austenite (α´´ → β) conversion. The influence of Nb content on the thermal stability and on the occurrence of decomposition reactions in martensitic Ti-Nb alloys is examined by isochronal differential scanning calorimetry, dilatometry and in-situ synchrotron X-ray diffraction complemented by transmission electron microscopy. The thermal decomposition and transformation behavior exhibits various phase transformation sequences during heating into the β-phase field in dependence of composition. Eventually, the transformation temperatures, interval, hysteresis and heat of the β ↔ α´´ martensitic transformation are investigated in relation to the Nb content. The results obtained in this study are useful for the development and optimization of β-stabilized Ti-based alloys for structural, Ni-free shape memory and/or superelastic, as well as for biomedical applications. / Ti-Nb Legierungen zeichnen sich durch eine vielfältige Metallurgie aus, die es nach sorgfältiger Auswahl der chemischen Zusammensetzung sowie der thermischen und mechanischen Prozessierungsroute ermöglicht eine große Bandbreite mikrostruktureller Konfigurationen und physikalischer Eigenschaften zu erhalten. Das Ziel der vorliegenden Arbeit ist es den gegenwärtigen Wissensstand über martensitbildende Ti-Nb Legierungen zu erweitern. Zu diesem Zweck werden 15 binäre Ti-c_{Nb} Nb (9 Gew.% ≤ c_{Nb} ≤ 44.5 Gew.%) Legierungen hinsichtlich ihrer strukturellen und mechanischen Eigenschaften sowie ihrer thermischen Stabilität untersucht. Die Kristallstrukturen der martensitischen Phasen, α´ und α´´, sowie der Einfluss des Nb-Gehalts auf die Gitterverzerrung (Bain-Verzerrung), auf die Verschiebungswellenkomponente (Shuffle-Komponente) und auf die Volumenänderung der martensitischen β → α´/α´´ Transformationen werden anhand von Rietveld-Verfeinerungen analysiert. In Abhängigkeit des Nb-Gehalts tritt entweder eine Volumendilatation oder -kontraktion auf, die bestimmen könnte ob hexagonaler Martensit α´ oder orthorhombischer Martensit α´´ aus β bei Abkühlung gebildet wird. Die mechanischen Eigenschaften und das Verformungsverhalten martensitischer Ti-Nb Legierungen werden mit einer Reihe komplementärer Methoden (monotone und zyklische einachsige Druckversuche, Nanoindentation, Mikrohärte, Impulserregungstechnik) untersucht. Die Ergebnisse zeigen durchgehend, dass die mechanischen Eigenschaften martensitischer Ti-Nb Legierungen stark vom Nb-Gehalt beeinflusst werden. Die mechanischen Kennwerte sind minimal in der Nähe der Zusammensetzungen, innerhalb derer β → α´´ bei Abkühlung auftritt. Aus Druckversuchen geht hervor, dass die elastischen Eigenschaften verformter Proben verschieden zu denen unverformter sind. Die experimentellen Ergebnisse weisen außerdem auf eine verformungsinduzierte Umwandlung von Martensit in Austenit (α´´ → β) hin. Der Einfluss des Nb-Gehalts auf die thermische Stabilität und das Auftreten von Zerfallsreaktionen in martensitischen Ti-Nb Legierungen wird anhand von dynamischer Differenzkalorimetrie, Dilatometrie, und in-situ Synchrotronröntgenbeugung in Kombination mit Transmissionselektronenmikroskopie untersucht. Das thermische Zerfalls- und Umwandlungsverhalten ist durch das Auftreten einer Vielzahl von in Abhängigkeit des Nb-Gehalts unterschiedlichen Phasentransformationssequenzen gekennzeichnet. Abschließend werden die Transformationstemperaturen und -wärmen, das Transformationsinterval und die thermische Hysterese der martensitischen β ↔ α´´ Umwandlung untersucht. Die Ergebnisse dieser Arbeit sind für die Entwicklung und Optimierung β-stabilisierter Ti-Legierungen für strukturelle und biomedizinische Anwendungen sowie Ni-freier Komponenten, die Formgedächtniseffekt und/oder Superelastizität aufweisen, von Nutzen.
10

Microstructural Phase Evolution In Laser Deposited Compositionally Graded Titanium Chromium Alloys

Thomas, Jonova 05 1900 (has links)
A compositionally graded Ti-xCr (10≤x≤30 wt%) alloy has been fabricated using Laser Engineered Net Shaping (LENSTM) to study the microstructural phase evolution along a compositional gradient in both as-deposited and heat treated conditions (1000°C followed by furnace cooling or air cooling). The alloys were characterized by SEM BSE imaging, XRD, EBSD, TEM and micro-hardness measurements to determine processing-structure-property relations. For the as-deposited alloy, α-Ti, β-Ti, and TiCr2 (C15 Laves) phases exist in varying phase fractions, which were influential in determining hardness values. With the furnace cooled alloy, there was more homogeneous nucleation of α phase throughout the sample with a larger phase fraction of TiCr2 resulting in increased hardness values. When compared to the air cooled alloy, there was absence of wide scale nucleation of α phase and formation of ω phase within the β phase due to the quicker cooling from elevated temperature. At lower concentrations of Cr, the kinetics resulted in a diffusionless phase transformation of ω phase with increased hardness and a lower phase fraction of TiCr2. In contrast at higher Cr concentrations, α phase separation reaction occurs where the β phase is spinodally decomposed to Cr solute-lean β1 and solute-rich β2 resulting in reduced hardness.

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