16 research outputs found

    Control of changes in the defect structure of titanium saturated with hydrogen

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    The hydrogenated samples of technical titanium were investigated using the EPA method and the measurements of the thermal electromotive force for these samples saturated with a different amount of hydrogen. The structure of the hydrogenated samples was studied by the X-ray diffraction method. The results have shown that the hydrogenated titanium structure starts changing at the same time, depending on the amount of added hydrogen. The intensity of the annihilation process increases with the increase in the hydrogen concentration in a-titanium up to the values of 4% wt and does not change up to the values of 5% wt ([alpha]+[beta]) - titanium. At the same time, the value of the thermal electromotive force decreases in this range of values. The annihilation intensity is stabilized for the values of 5% wt, and the value of the thermal electromotive force is increased. The inflection point for the thermal electromotive force versus the hydrogen concentration corresponds to the formation of [delta] - hydrides. The increase in the positron lifetime starts in the concentration range of 6-8% and moves to the stable level up to the concentrations of 21-22%. In this range, there is a transition from the wt ([alpha]+[beta]) to the wt ([alpha]+[delta) phase. The lifetime of positrons and the number of defects are increased, the value of the thermal electromotive force is reduced (up to the concentration of 24%), then there is a stabilization mode for all these parameters up to the values 32% wt

    The investigation of hydrogenation influence on structure changes of zirconium with nickel layer

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    The results of experimental investigation of hydrogenation influence on structure changes of zirconium alloy (Zr-1%Nb) with thin nickel layer have presented in this work. Nickel layer was formed by magnetron sputter deposition. Hydrogenation was carried out at gas atmosphere at constant temperature. Different hydrogen concentrations were obtained by varying time of hydrogenation. Defect and phase structure was studied by means of X-ray diffraction, glow discharge optical emission spectroscopy, positron lifetime and Doppler broadening spectroscopies. New experimental data about the evolution of the positron annihilation parameters depending on hydrogen concentration in Zr-1Nb alloy with nickel layer was obtained

    Effect of Hydrogen on the Structural and Phase State and Defect Structure of Titanium Alloy

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    Effect of hydrogen on the structural and phase state of the fine- and ultrafine-grained structure of two-phase (alpha + beta) titanium Ti-6Al-4V alloy was investigated by the methods of electron microscopy and X-ray diffraction analysis. The defect structure of the fine- and ultrafine-grained samples before and after hydrogen treatment was studied by the implemented Positron lifetime technique. Hydrogenation is found to result in minor structural and phase changes both in fine- and ultrafine-grained samples. It is shown that defect structure of samples depends on the structural state and hydrogen presence

    Influence of beam current on microstructure of electron beam melted Ti-6Al-4V alloy

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    The defect microstructure of the samples manufactured from Ti-6Al-4V powder was studied using electron beam melting (EBM) in the beam current range of 17 - 13β€―mA. The hybrid digital complex combined positron lifetime spectroscopy and coincidence Doppler broadening spectroscopy was used to characterize the defect structure of the materials. The microstructure and defects were also analyzed by transmission electron microscopy. It has been established that the main type of the defects in the EBM manufactured samples is dislocations. According to the conducted measurements and calculations, the dislocation density in the EBM manufactured samples exceeds by two orders the similar value for the cast Ti-6Al-4Valloy. Formation of Ti-Ti-Al nanoscale clusters has been found in the EBM manufactured samples

    Effect of Proton Irradiation on the Defect Evolution of Zr/Nb Nanoscale Multilayers

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    Nanoscale multilayer coatings (NMCs) with different crystal structures are considered as capable of self-healing after radiation damage due to the recombination of vacancies and interstitials. This work is focused on a defect distribution study of NMCs based on Zr/Nb layers (25/25 nm and 100/100 nm) after proton irradiation. Coatings with a total thickness of 1.05 Β± 0.05 Β΅m were irradiated by 900-keV protons using a pelletron-type electrostatic accelerator with an ion current of 2 Β΅A for durations of 60 min to 120 min. The influence of the irradiation effect was studied by X-ray diffraction analysis (XRD), glow discharge optical emission spectrometry (GD–OES), and Doppler broadening spectroscopy using a variable energy positron beam. The results obtained by these methods are compatible and indicate that defect concentration of Zr/Nb NMCs remains unchanged or slightly decreases with increasing irradiation time

    Effect of Proton Irradiation on the Defect Evolution of Zr/Nb Nanoscale Multilayers

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    Nanoscale multilayer coatings (NMCs) with different crystal structures are considered as capable of self-healing after radiation damage due to the recombination of vacancies and interstitials. This work is focused on a defect distribution study of NMCs based on Zr/Nb layers (25/25 nm and 100/100 nm) after proton irradiation. Coatings with a total thickness of 1.05 Β± 0.05 Β΅m were irradiated by 900-keV protons using a pelletron-type electrostatic accelerator with an ion current of 2 Β΅A for durations of 60 min to 120 min. The influence of the irradiation effect was studied by X-ray diffraction analysis (XRD), glow discharge optical emission spectrometry (GD–OES), and Doppler broadening spectroscopy using a variable energy positron beam. The results obtained by these methods are compatible and indicate that defect concentration of Zr/Nb NMCs remains unchanged or slightly decreases with increasing irradiation time

    Positron Annihilation Spectroscopy Study of Metallic Materials after High-Speed Cutting

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    During high-speed cutting, a white layer is often produced on the machined surfaces after mechanical machining, seriously affecting the mechanical properties. These properties are related to the material structure and the defects induced by cutting. However, there is a lack of research on the atomic-scale defects of the white layer. This paper studied the influence of cutting parameters, namely the feed rate, cutting speed and cutting depth, on atomic-scale defects induced by high-speed cutting in GCr15 steel. Positron annihilation studies showed typical plastically deformed or tempered carbon steel defects with additional vacancy cluster components. The quantity of these clusters changed with cutting parameters. Furthermore, significant changes were observed in the subsurface region up to 1 Β΅m, occurring as a result of simultaneous phase transformations, deformation and thermal impacts. The predominant accumulation of only one type of atomic-scale defect was not observed

    Source for In Situ Positron Annihilation Spectroscopy of Thermal-And Hydrogen-Induced Defects Based on the Cu-64 Isotope

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    This work aims to investigate the 64Cu isotope applicability for positron annihilation experiments in in situ mode. We determined appropriate characteristics of this isotope for defect studies and implemented them under aggressive conditions (i.e., elevated temperature, hydrogen environment) in situ to determine the sensitivity of this approach to thermal vacancies and hydrogen-induced defects investigation. Titanium samples were used as test materials. The source was obtained by the activation of copper foil in the thermal neutron flux of a research nuclear reactor. Main spectrometric characteristics (e.g., the total number of counts, fraction of good signals, peak-to-noise ratio) of this source, as well as line-shaped parameters of the Doppler broadening spectrum (DBS), were studied experimentally. These characteristics for 64Cu (in contrast to positron sources with longer half-life) were shown to vary strongly with time, owing to the rapidly changing activity. These changes are predictable and should be considered in the analysis of experimental data to reveal information about the defect structure. The investigation of samples with a controlled density of defects revealed the suitability of 64Cu positron source with an activity of 2-40 MBq for defects studies by DBS. However, greater isotope activity could also be applied. The results of testing this source at high temperatures and in hydrogen atmosphere showed its suitability to thermal vacancies and hydrogen-induced defects studies in situ. The greatest changes in the defect structure of titanium alloy during high-temperature hydrogen saturation occurred at the cooling stage, when the formation of hydrides began, and were associated with an increase in the dislocation density

    Positron annihilation spectroscopy of vacancy-type defects hierarchy in submicrocrystalline nickel during annealing

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    Positron annihilation and X-ray diffraction analysis have been used to study submicrocrystalline nickel samples prepared by equal channel angular pressing. In the as-prepared samples the positrons are trapped at dislocation-type defects and in vacancy clusters that can include up to 5 vacancies. The study has revealed that the main positron trap centers at the annealing temperature of deltaT= 20Β°C-180Β°C are low-angle boundaries enriched by impurities. At deltaT = 180Β°C-360Β°C, the trap centers are low-angle boundaries providing the grain growth due to recrystallization in-situ
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