Role of Surfaces and Interfaces in Controlling the Mechanical Properties of Metallic Alloys

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This article explores the subtle effects of surfaces and interfaces on the mechanical properties of bulk metallic alloys using three examples: environmental effects on fatigue life, hydrogen embrittlement effects on the ductility of intermetallics, and the role of coherent precipitates in the toughness of steels. It is demonstrated that the marked degradation of the fatigue life of metals is due to the strong chemisorption of adsorbates on exposed slip steps that are formed during fatigue deformation. These adsorbates reduce the reversibility of slip, thus accelerating fatigue damage in a chemically active gas environment. For certain intermetallic alloys such as Ni(3)Al and Ni(3)Fe, the ductility depends on the ambient gas composition and the atomic ordering in these alloys, both of which govern the complex surface chemical reactions taking place in the vicinity of crack tips. Finally, it is shown that local stresses at a coherent precipitate matrix interface can activate dislocation motion at low temperatures, thus improving the fracture toughness of bulk alloys such as steels at cryogenic temperatures. These examples illustrate the complex interplay between surface chemistry and mechanics, often yielding unexpected results.
Publisher
Amer Chemical Soc
Issue Date
2010-11
Language
English
Article Type
Article
Keywords

ROOM-TEMPERATURE DUCTILITY; FATIGUE-CRACK INITIATION; SILVER SINGLE-CRYSTALS; ENVIRONMENTAL EMBRITTLEMENT; WATER-VAPOR; NI3AL; OXYGEN; NI3FE; HYDROGEN; BORON

Citation

LANGMUIR, v.26, no.21, pp.16254 - 16260

ISSN
0743-7463
URI
http://hdl.handle.net/10203/25085
Appears in Collection
MS-Journal Papers(저널논문)
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