1. Ductilization of Mo–Si solid solutions manufactured by powder metallurgy
- Author
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Easo P. George, Manja Krüger, Daniel Sturm, Joachim H. Schneibel, Ch. Somsen, Y. Yang, Lee Heatherly Jr, Gunther Eggeler, Holger Saage, and Martin Heilmaier
- Subjects
Materials science ,Polymers and Plastics ,Metallurgy ,Metals and Alloys ,Microstructure ,Grain size ,Electronic, Optical and Magnetic Materials ,Brittleness ,Flexural strength ,Powder metallurgy ,Ceramics and Composites ,Grain boundary ,Ductility ,Solid solution - Abstract
Mo–1.5 at.% Si alloys with additions of either Y2O3 or Zr were manufactured by mechanical alloying. The Y2O3 particles reduced the grain size and increased the room temperature strength, but did not alleviate the brittleness of previously investigated Mo–1.5 at.% Si without Y2O3. Additions of Zr, on the other hand, resulted not only in a fine grain size and an extremely high bend strength (∼2 GPa), but also in limited bend ductility at room temperature. Zr additions are seen to be beneficial for three reasons. First, Zr reduces the grain size. Second, Zr getters detrimental oxygen by forming ZrO2 particles (which in turn help to pin the grain boundaries). Third, in situ Auger analysis shows that Zr reduces the concentration of Si segregated at the grain boundaries. This is thought to enhance the grain boundary cohesive strength and thus leads to the observed ductility.
- Published
- 2009
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