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The strength and ductility of polycrystalline NiAl in tensionExperiments at temperatures from 20 C to 400 C at two strain rates (.0001/s and .000005/s) establish that: (1) at room temperatures, binary and microalloyed ( 1000 ppm La, Y, Mo, Ti) NiAl shows negligible ductility, independent of grain size over the range 5 to 140 micrometers; (2) at 295 C the tensile elongation of binary 51 Ni/49 Al increases from 1% to about 5% upon decreasing the grain size to below approximately 10 micrometers; (3) similarly, at 400 C the ductility increases from about 2% to 15% upon decreasing the grain size to below 15 micrometers; (4) the ductility of fine grained (7 micrometer) binary aggregates deformed at 295 C increases from approximately 5% to 12% upon decreasing the strain rate from .0001/s to .000005/s; (5) partial recrystallization (10% to 20%) of warm extruded binary and microalloyed material imparts 1% to 2% ductility at room temperature where fully recrystallized material is brittle; (6) the yield strength obeys a Hall-Petch relationship; and (7) when ductility is not observed, fracture coincides with yielding. The mechanisms underlying the flow and fracture of NiAl are discussed in terms of the nucleation and growth of microcracks. The concept of a critical grain size is considered in the light of the results.
Document ID
19830003031
Acquisition Source
Legacy CDMS
Document Type
Conference Paper
Authors
Schulson, E. M.
(Dartmouth Coll. Hanover, NH, United States)
Date Acquired
August 11, 2013
Publication Date
October 1, 1982
Publication Information
Publication: NASA. Lewis Research Center COSAM (Conserv. of Strategic Aerospace Mater.) Program Overview
Subject Category
Metallic Materials
Accession Number
83N11301
Distribution Limits
Public
Copyright
Work of the US Gov. Public Use Permitted.
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