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Microstructural evolution of adiabatic shear bands in steel by impact

This research, is initiated to systematically study the microstructure of AISI 4340 steel prior to impact, after impact and after post-impact annealing to determine the effect of the pre-deformation microstructure on the nucleation and initiation of ASBs, and the mechanism of evolution of ASBs during impact. This study used state-of-the-art microstructural characterization techniques such as the FIB and STEM/HRTEM to reveal that initial microstructural inhomogeneity produces nucleation sites for the initiation of ASBs during impact. It was observed that double misfit interfaces and boundary layers, formed around precipitated carbides (interface between reinforcements and matrix), increased the volume fraction of dislocation sources within the pre-impact specimens. It is demonstrated that the intersection of an activated dislocation source with the direction of maximum shear (regions of stress concentrations) within the specimens during impact, is a necessary condition for the points of intersection to act as possible sites for the nucleation and initiation of ASB depending on the rate of dislocation generation, local strain and strain rate. In addition, the structure that evolves after strain localization starts out with elongation of the grains in the shear direction with the initiation of random and transverse dislocation boundaries along the elongated grains. The elongated grains break along the initiated dislocation boundaries as strain/strain rate increases resulting in the creation of smaller elongated-broken grains and nanograins. Boundary refinement of the broken grains occurring through grain rotation and adiabatic heating results in the evolution of refined grains, subgrains and nanograins. The presence of elongated grains, broken grains, refined grains, subgrains and nanograins within the evolved shear band structures demonstrate that the local deformation is dependent on the imposed local strain and strain rate and that these mechanisms occur concurrently during impact. The results obtained, which are specific to the behavior of BCC ferritic Pearlitic hardenable steels, lead to the conclusion that the evolution of ASBs is a simultaneous layering of microstructures initially driven by dislocations which produce the final structures observed in the shear bands at the end of passage of the stress wave. / February 2015

Identiferoai:union.ndltd.org:MANITOBA/oai:mspace.lib.umanitoba.ca:1993/24095
Date January 2014
CreatorsBoakye-Yiadom, Solomon
ContributorsBassim, Nabil (Mechanical Engineering), Polyzois, Dimos (Civil Engineering) Ojo, Olanrewaju (Mechanical Engineering) Glinka, Gregory (University of Waterloo)
PublisherMaterials Science And Engineering A, Materials Science And Engineering A, Philosophical Magazine, Materials Science And Engineering A, Metallurgical And Materials Transaction A, Materials Science And Engineering A
Source SetsUniversity of Manitoba Canada
Detected LanguageEnglish

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