X-ray diffraction study of the structure of single crystals of Ni3Al alloy using synchrotron radiation after intense plastic deformation

Not scheduled
15m
Conference Hall (Budker INP)

Conference Hall

Budker INP

Lavrentiev av. 11, Novosibirsk 630090 Russia
Poster X-ray structural analysis

Speaker

Olga Kuts (Tomsk State University of Architecture and Building)

Description

X-ray analysis has been applied for the study of the ultrafine-grained structure as a result of intense deformation in crystals Ni3Al alloy ordered by the L12 type using synchrotron radiation. In the initial state the material under study is in the single crystal ordered state and is oriented along the compression axis [211]. It should be noted that along with the ordered phase there is a small fraction of the disordered crystal oriented along the [100] axis. Compression of samples in Bridgman anvils and subsequent twisting at different angles has led to a change in their structural state. After compression between anvils and at reaching an average quasi-hydrostatic pressure of 8.0 GPa, the material changes in single-crystal structure to fragmented state. In addition to large crystalline fragments, submicrocrystalline disoriented regions appear. This work was supported by the Russian Foundation for Basic Research (project No. 16-03-00182-a). X-ray synchrotron measurements were carried out at the experimental station Diffractometry in the “Hard” X-ray Range at the Center of Collaborative Access of the Siberian Synchrotron and Terahertz Radiation Center, Budker Institute of Nuclear Physics, Siberian Branch of the Russian Academy of Sciences, Novosibirsk.

Primary author

Olga Kuts (Tomsk State University of Architecture and Building)

Co-authors

Alexey Ancharov (Institute of Solid State Chemistry and Mechanochemistry SB RAS) Prof. Svetlana Starenchenko (Tomsk State University of Architecture and Building) Vitaliy Pilyugin (M.N. Mikheev Institute of Metal Physics of the Ural Branch of the Russian Academy of Sciences (IMP UB RAS)) Yuliya Solov’eva (Tomsk State University of Architecture and Building)

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