Journal of Materials Research and Technology (May 2024)
Grain boundary engineering using self-organized high-index twins produced by twin-twin reactions in β-Ti alloys: A phase field study
Abstract
Introducing coherent twin boundaries is an effective way to develop submicron/nano-sized grains with improved thermal stability in polycrystals, which exhibit enhanced mechanical properties of metals, such as high strength, high hardness and high fracture toughness. However, crystalline defects, such as dislocations and disclinations, usually arise at twin boundary junctions, which lead to local stress concentration and property degradation. Here we show that a large number of high-index coherent twin boundaries (e.g., Σ11 and Σ19a) can be produced through a well-controlled deformation twinning process. By using metastable β-Ti alloys as an example and analyzing the broken symmetry associated with deformation twinning, we demonstrate that the abnormal high-index twins result from intercorrelated twinning pathways and twin-twin reactions. The formation mechanism of self-organized multi-twin structures has been analyzed systematically through phase field modeling and simulations. It has been found that, under well designed thermo-mechanical condition, regularly distributed high-index twin boundaries and geometrically-compatible twin boundary junctions (i.e., dislocation/disclination-free) can be produced. The stress/strain condition required to obtain self-organized twins has been quantitatively determined, which provides a theoretical guideline for the development of self-organized submicron/nano-twin metals for unprecedented properties.