2 research outputs found

    An Experimental and Numerical Simulation Study of Single Particle Impact during Detonation Spraying

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    A comparison of the numerical simulation and an experimental study of the collision of the particles and the substrate during detonation spraying is presented. The spraying regimes were chosen to provide unmelted, partially melted, and completely molten particles. The numerical simulation was performed using the smoothed particle hydrodynamics (SPH) method with velocity and temperature settings as initial conditions. Good agreement was obtained between the simulation results and the experimental data, making the SPH simulation suitable for analysis of the deformation of particles and the substrate during detonation spraying. Information about the particle’s shape evolution during the collision is presented. An increase in temperature and plastic strain is analyzed at different points of the particle and substrate. Under certain spraying regimes, it is possible to melt a solid particle due to its high-strain-rate deformation, but no melting of the substrate was observed during the simulation

    On the texture and superstructure formation in Ti–TiAl3_3–Al MIL composites

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    In recent decades, metal-intermetallic laminated (MIL) composites are of great interest to the scientific community. The intermetallic layers in such composites possess a strong crystallographic texture and can form various superstructures. However, these effects are rarely discussed in the literature. By application of synchrotron X-ray diffraction (SXRD) we show, that an intermetallic layer in explosively welded and annealed Ti-Al-based MIL composite consists of two modifications of titanium trialuminide: TiAl3_3 with a D022_{22} structure and its superstructure Ti8_8Al24_{24}. According to SXRD analysis, the volume fraction of the Ti8_8Al24_{24} modification increases from Al/intermetallic interface towards Ti/intermetallic interface. This may be caused by the lack of Al for the formation of stoichiometric titanium trialuminide near the interface with Ti, which leads to the formation of a long-period structures having Ti1+x_{1+x}Al3−x_{3-x} stoichiometry. Two types of fiber texture were formed in the titanium trialuminide layer: [001] near the Ti/intermetallic interface and near the Al/intermetallic interface, which is caused by peculiarities of Ti and Al atoms migration. To explain the features of the forming texture, hypothetical mechanisms of Al and Ti diffusion in the intermetallic layer are discussed in this study: a vacancy diffusion, an interstitial diffusion, and a six jump vacancy cycle (6JVC)
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