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Modeling the reaction synthesis of shock-densified titanium-silicon powder mixture compacts

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TLDR
In this paper, a reaction synthesis model was developed to predict the optimum conditions necessary to ensure that the bulk of the reaction in dynamically densified Ti-Si powder compacts occurs by rapid solid-state diffusion and without being taken over by the combustion process.
Abstract
The reaction behavior of shock-consolidated Ti-Si powder mixture compacts, densified at 5 to 7 GPa pressure, was investigated to determine conditions required for solid-state reaction synthesis leading to the formation of dense Ti5Si3 intermetallic compounds with fine-grained microstructure. It was observed that at temperatures greater than 1000 °C, the heat released following reaction initiation in the solid state exceeds the rate of heat dissipation causing a self-propagating combustion-type reaction to take over the synthesis process forming highly porous reaction products. A reaction synthesis model was developed to allow the prediction of optimum conditions necessary to ensure that the bulk of the reaction in dynamically densified Ti-Si powder compacts occurs by rapid solid-state diffusion and without being taken over by the combustion process. The model incorporates mass and heat balance with the kinetics evaluated using experimentally determined apparent activation energies for solid-state and combustion reactions. Considering the decrease in activation energy (as measure of degree of shock activation), average particle size, and compact porosity as the main variables, the model plots the fraction reacted as a function of time for various postshock reaction-synthesis temperatures, illustrating the dominant reaction mechanism and kinetics. The results show that although changes in average particle size and compact porosity influence the synthesis temperature above which the reaction may be taken over by the combustion-type process, lowering of the activation energy via shock-compression influences the time for reaction completion in the solid state.

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Journal ArticleDOI

Shear Localization in Metallic Materials at High Strain Rates

TL;DR: In this paper, the authors review the development of both theoretical and experimental achievements, from the initiation of shear bands to their propagation with emphasis on three aspects: novel experimental techniques, novel materials, and nano/microstructural effects.
Journal ArticleDOI

Effect of Fe addition on self-propagating high-temperature synthesis of Ti5Si3 in Fe–Ti–Si system

TL;DR: The effect of Fe addition on the SHS reaction products of Fe-Ti-Si system was investigated in this paper, where the authors showed that Fe not only serves as a diluent, but also participates in the reaction process.
Journal ArticleDOI

Investigation of “shock-induced” and “shock-assisted” chemical reactions in Mo + 2Si powder mixtures

TL;DR: In this article, the authors investigated chemical reactions occurring in Mo + 2Si powder mixtures under "shock-induced" (during the high-pressure shock state) and "shock assisted" (due to bulk temperature increases subsequent to unloading from the shock state).
Journal ArticleDOI

Historical perspective and contribution of US researchers into the field of self-propagating high-temperature synthesis (SHS)/combustion synthesis (CS): Personal reflections

TL;DR: This paper presented an historical perspective and contributions of U.S. researchers into the field of self-propagating high-temperature synthesis (SHS)/Combustion Synthesis (CS) and personal reflections of the authors from about 1976 to the present for a special meeting in Chernogolovka, Russia -SHS-40 -celebrating 40 years of SHS research.
References
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Book

Conduction of Heat in Solids

TL;DR: In this paper, a classic account describes the known exact solutions of problems of heat flow, with detailed discussion of all the most important boundary value problems, including boundary value maximization.
Journal ArticleDOI

X-ray line broadening from filed aluminium and wolfram

TL;DR: In this paper, the authors used a Geiger counter spectrometer to measure the changes in intensity distribution in the spectra of cold worked aluminium and wolfram and found that the line breadths may be attributed to simultaneous small particle size and strain broadening, the latter predominating at the higher Bragg angles.
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III. Dislocation densities in some annealed and cold-worked metals from measurements on the X-ray debye-scherrer spectrum

TL;DR: In this article, two basic equations are derived for deducing the dislocation density in powdered materials from the particle size and strain breadth measured from the Debye-Schemer spectrum.
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