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Journal ArticleDOI

A general mechanism of martensitic nucleation: Part I. General concepts and the FCC → HCP transformation

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TLDR
In this paper, the stacking fault energy is shown to consist of both volume energy and surface energy contributions, and when the volume energy contribution is negative, the fault energy decreases with increasing fault thickness such that fault energy associated with the simultaneous dissociation of an appropriate group of dislocations can be zero or negative.
Abstract
Consideration of the martensitic nucleation process as a sequence of steps which take the particle from maximum to minimum coherency leads to the hypothesis that the first step in martensitic nucleation is faulting on planes of closest packing. It is further postulated that the faulting displacements are derived from an existing defect, while matrix constraints cause all subsequent processes to occur in such a way as to leave the fault plane unrotated, thus accounting for the observed general orientation relations. Using basic concepts of classical nucleation theory, the stacking fault energy is shown to consist of both volume energy and surface energy contributions. When the volume energy contribution is negative, the fault energy decreases with increasing fault thickness such that the fault energy associated with the simultaneous dissociation of an appropriate group of dislocations (e.g. a finite tilt boundary segment) can be zero or negative. This condition leads to the spontaneous formation of a martensitic embryo. For the specific case of the fcc → hcp martensitic transformation in Fe-Cr-Ni alloys, the defect necessary to account for spontaneous embryo formation at the observedM s temperatures may consist of four or five properly spaced lattice dislocations. Such defects are considered to be consistent with the known sparseness of initial martensitic nucleation sites.

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Citations
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Journal ArticleDOI

Assessment of Entropy Differences from Critical Stress Versus Temperature Martensitic Transformation Data in Cu-Based Shape-Memory Alloys

TL;DR: In this article, the authors derived the entropy differences per unit volume (ΔStrans) between the close-packed phases in a martensitic transformation (MT) in Cu-based shape-memory alloys by measuring, as a function of temperature (T), the critical resolved stress (τ).
Journal ArticleDOI

In situ neutron diffraction reveals the effect of Cu micro-alloying on low-temperature tensile properties of TWIP steels

TL;DR: In this paper , the authors investigated the role of Cu addition on the mechanical and microstructural responses of high manganese steels at the low-temperature range (293, 173, and 77 K).
Dissertation

Characterizing the Martensitic Transformation in a 10% Nickel Steel During Dynamic Deformation using In Situ X-Ray Diffraction

TL;DR: In this paper, the authors used time-resolved x-ray diffraction and several other characterization methods to obtain quantitative information about both the bulk flow stress of a material, and information about a variety of microstructural features of the material as its microstructure evolves at high strain rates.
Journal ArticleDOI

The influence of the heat generation during deformation on the mechanical properties and microstructure of the selected TWIP steels

TL;DR: In this article , two TWIP steels were used with and without V microadditions (MnAl and MnAl-V steel) to evaluate the cold formability of twinning induced plasticity (TwIP) steels.
Journal ArticleDOI

Athermal martensite transformation of modified high Cr ferritic heat resistant steel undergoing different quenching temperatures

TL;DR: In this paper, a model considering spread martensites was introduced to explore the influence of quenching temperatures on martensite transformation, and it was shown that the width/length ratio of martensitic laths decreases with the increase in quench temperatures.
References
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Journal ArticleDOI

The Determination of the Elastic Field of an Ellipsoidal Inclusion, and Related Problems

TL;DR: In this paper, it is shown that to answer several questions of physical or engineering interest, it is necessary to know only the relatively simple elastic field inside the ellipsoid.
Book

Theory of Dislocations

TL;DR: Dislocations in Isotropic Continua: Effects of Crystal Structure on Dislocations and Dislocation-Point-Defect Interactions at Finite temperatures.
Journal ArticleDOI

The scientific papers

J. Willard Gibbs
- 01 Dec 1908 - 
TL;DR: Physical and psychosocial factors associated with psychostimulant use in a nationally representative sample of French adolescents: Specificities of cocaine, amphetamine, and ecstasy use are studied.
Journal ArticleDOI

The crystallography of martensite transformations II

TL;DR: In this paper, the total strain in a martensite transformation was derived from the orientation relationship and the component strains, together with the correspondence, and the dimensions of the initial and final structures.
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