ISSN:
1551-2916
Source:
Blackwell Publishing Journal Backfiles 1879-2005
Topics:
Mechanical Engineering, Materials Science, Production Engineering, Mining and Metallurgy, Traffic Engineering, Precision Mechanics
,
Physics
Notes:
Available deformation data for superplastic yttria-stabilized zirconia polycrystals with grain size 〈1 µm have been analyzed at temperatures between 1250° and 1450°C as a function of stress, grain size, and impurity content. The apparent stress exponent nfor the higher-purity materials (residual impurity content 〈0.10 wt%) varies from 2 (region II) to greaterthan equal to3 (region I), and then toward 1 when the stress is decreased. The stress for transition between region II and region I decreases when the temperature and/or grain size is increased. The activation energy Qfor flow in region II is 460 kJ/mol, which is approximately that for cation lattice diffusion. The grain-size exponent pdecreases continuously and Qincreases continuously with decreasing stress in region I. The constitutive equation for superplastic flow in region II is identical to that for metallic systems when lattice diffusion is the rate-controlling mechanism. The experimental results have been correlated with a single deformation process that incorporates a threshold stress, below which grain-boundary sliding does not contribute to strain. The threshold stress may result from yttrium segregation at grain boundaries and its interaction with grain-boundary dislocations. A single deformation regime with n= 2 exists for low-purity materials (impurity content 〉0.10 wt%) over the entire stress range. The strain-rate enhancement with respect to high-purity materials is related to the grain-boundary amorphous phase present in such materials.
Type of Medium:
Electronic Resource
URL:
http://dx.doi.org/10.1111/j.1151-2916.1998.tb02695.x
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