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A mesoscale study of a single crystal nickel-base superalloy subjected to an industrially relevant process simulation has revealed the complex interplay between microstructural development and the micromechanical behaviour. As sample gauge volumes were smaller than the length scale of the highly cored structure of the parent material from which they were produced, their subtle composition differences gave rise to differing work hardening rates, influenced by varying secondary dendrite arm spacings, gamma-prime phase solvus temperatures and a topologically inverted gamma/gamma-prime microstructure. The gamma-prime precipitates possessed a characteristic `X morphology, resulting from the simultaneously active solute transport mechanisms of thermally favoured octodendritic growth and N-type rafting, indicating creep-type mechanisms were prevalent. High resolution-electron backscatter diffraction (HR-EBSD) characterisation reveals deformation patterning that follows the gamma/gamma-prime microstructure, with high geometrically necessary dislocation density fields localised to the gamma/gamma-prime interfaces; Orowan looping is evidently the mechanism that mediated plasticity. Examination of the residual elastic stresses indicated the `X gamma-prime precipitate morphology had significantly enhanced the deformation heterogeneity, resulting in stress states within the gamma channels that favour slip, and that encourage further growth of gamma-prime precipitate protrusions. The combination of such localised plasticity and residual stresses are considered to be critical in the formation of the recrystallisation defect in subsequent post-casting homogenisation heat treatments.
Deformation twinning in pure aluminum has been considered to be a unique property of nanostructured aluminum. A lingering mystery is whether deformation twinning occurs in coarse-grained or single-crystal aluminum, at scales beyond nanotwins. Here, w
The plastic deformation mechanisms of tungsten carbide at room and elevated temperatures influence the wear and fracture properties of WC-Co hardmetal composite materials. Although the active slip planes and residual defect populations of room-temper
Tungsten carbide cobalt hardmetals are commonly used as cutting tools subject to high operation temperature and pressures, where the mechanical performance of the tungsten carbide phase affects the wear and lifetime of the material. In this study, th
This work is focused on the micromechanical modelling of the low cycle fatigue of the nickel based $gamma/gamma$ superalloy AM1 at high temperature. The nature of the activated slip systems in the different types of channels of the $gamma$ phase is a
A systematic study of the compression creep properties of a single-crystalline Co-base superalloy (Co-9Al-7.5W-2Ta) was conducted at 950 {deg}C, 975 {deg}C and 1000 {deg}C to reveal the influence of temperature and the resulting diffusion velocity of