229 research outputs found

    Evaluation of residual stress levels in plasma electrolytic oxidation coatings using a curvature method

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    Experimental estimates have been made of typical levels of residual stress in plasma electrolytic oxidation (PEO) coatings formed on aluminium and magnesium alloy substrates. This has been done via measurement of the curvature exhibited by thin strip samples, coated on one side only, using coating stiffness values obtained in the current work. In order to obtain curvatures that were sufficiently large to be accurately measurable, it was necessary to produce relatively thick (~ 100 ÎŒm) coatings on relatively thin (~ 300–500 ÎŒm) substrates. In such cases, stress levels are significant in both constituents, and there are significant through-thickness gradients of stress. The relevant characteristics of the transformation (largely oxidation of the substrate) are therefore best expressed as a misfit strain. This was found to have a magnitude of about 0.6–0.9 millistrain for the Al substrate and 2–3 millistrain for Mg, with a positive sign (so that the stress-free in-plane dimensions of the coating are larger than those of the residual substrate). This puts the coating into residual compression and, on a thick substrate, typical stress levels would be around 40–50 MPa for Al and 130–150 MPa for Mg. These values should be regarded as approximate, although their order of magnitude is probably reliable. They are higher than those from the (very limited) previous work carried out using this type of technique. On the other hand, they are lower than many values obtained using X-ray diffraction. Explanations are proposed for these discrepancies.This work has been supported by EPSRC (grant number EP/I001174/1) and also by Keronite plc, from where contributions have been made by Steve Hutchins and Suman Shrestha.This is the final published version. It was originally published by Elsevier at http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.surfcoat.2014.11.00

    Nano-terracing on polycrystalline palladium induced via simple heat treatment

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    This paper concerns formation of terraces on polycrystalline Pd, via heat treatments followed by quenching with gas jets. The driving force for terrace formation is the crystallographic anisotropy of the surface energy. Information is presented regarding the surface topography of the terraces and of the grain boundary regions. Typically, the step heights are about 50 nm and the widths of the faces between them are around 1 Όm. It is shown that a measure of control can be exercised over the structures produced, although they are determined by a complex interplay of related effects.This research was supported by the EPSRC (EP/E025862/1) and the European Research Council (grant no. 240446)

    A critical assessment of the "stable indenter velocity" method for obtaining the creep stress exponent from indentation data

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    A technique for evaluating the (steady-state) creep stress exponent (n) from indentation data has come into common use over recent years. It involves monitoring the indenter displacement history under constant load and assuming that, once its velocity has stabilised, the system is in a quasisteady state, with Stage II creep dominating the behaviour. The stress field under the indenter, and the way in which the creep strain field is changing there, are then represented by "equivalent stress" and "equivalent strain rate" values. These are manipulated in a similar manner to that conventionally employed with (uniaxial) creep test data, allowing the stress exponent, n, to be obtained as the gradient of a plot of the logarithm of the equivalent strain rate against the logarithm of the equivalent stress. The procedure is therefore a very simple one, often carried out over relatively short timescales (of the order of an hour or less). However, concerns have been expressed about its reliability, regarding the neglect of primary creep (after a very short initial transient) and about the validity of representing the stress and strain rate via these "equivalent" values. In this paper, comprehensive experimental data (both from a conventional, uniaxial loading set-up and from instrumented indentation over a range of conditions) are presented for two materials, focussing entirely on ambient temperature testing. This is supplemented by predictions from numerical (FEM) modelling. It is shown that the methodology is fundamentally flawed, commonly giving unreliable (and often very high) values for n. The reasons for this are outlined in some detail. An attempt is made to identify measures that might improve the reliability of the procedure, although it is concluded that there is no simple analysis of this type that can be recommended.RCUK, Othe

    High speed video evidence for localised discharge cascades during plasma electrolytic oxidation

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    Information is presented from high speed video imaging of the free surface of coatings being grown on aluminium substrates by PEO processing. The exposure time during image capture ranged down to 5.5 ÎŒs, while the linear spatial resolution of the images ranged upwards from about 12 ÎŒm. The area being viewed was about 2.4 mm2, which was taken to be representative of the substrate area as a whole (~ 129 mm2). PEO processing was carried out at 50 Hz AC. The periods over which image sequences were captured was about 100 ms, covering several cycles of variation of the applied potential. This operation was repeated periodically while the coating thickness increased from a few microns to several tens of microns. During the imaging periods, it was typically observed that tens or hundreds of individual discharges were occurring, all of them readily distinguishable from the background light levels. Their duration was of the order of several tens of microseconds. It was noticeable that they tended to occur in “cascades” at particular locations, each sequence comprising tens or hundreds of individual discharges, with an “incubation” period between them of the order of several hundreds of microseconds. It seems likely that they all occurred during the positive (anodic) half-cycle, while the applied voltage was sufficiently high. An individual cascade tended to persist (at the same location) over several voltage cycles. As the coating became thicker, these characteristics broadly persisted, although individual discharges became longer-lived and more energetic. An attempt is made to relate these observations to the overall picture of how coating growth takes place during PEO processing, and also to the overall energy consumption.This work has been supported by EPSRC (grant number EP/I001174/1), by a Sims Scholarship (for SCT) in Cambridge University and by Keronite plc. The research also forms part of the activities of the COST TD 1208 Network.This is the final published version. It first appeared at http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S0257897215000778#
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