Scientific Events

Room: Large Conference Room No. 203 Host: on invitation of Prof. Gerhard Dehm

Local Phase Transformations: A New Creep Strengthening Mechanism in Ni-Base Superalloys

Polycrystalline Ni-based superalloys are vital materials for disks in the hot section of aerospace and land-based turbine engines due to their exceptional microstructural stability and strength at high temperatures. In order to increase operating temperatures and hold times in these engines, hence increasing engine efficiency and reduction of carbon emissions, creep properties of these alloys becomes increasingly important. Microtwinning and stacking fault shearing through the strengthening g’ precipitates are important operative mechanisms in the critical 600-800°C temperature range. Atomic-scale chemical and structural analyses indicate that local phase transformations (LPT) occur commonly during creep of superalloys. Furthermore, the important deformation modes can be modulated by LPT formation, enabling a new path for improving high temperature properties. [more]

High-resolution micro-plasticity in advanced high-strength steels

The persistent demand for green, strong and ductile advanced high strength steels, with a reduced climate footprint, calls for novel and improved multi-phase microstructures. The development of these new steels requires an in-depth understanding of the governing plasticity mechanisms at the micron scale. In order to address this challenge, novel numerical-experimental methods are called for that account for the discreteness, statistics and the intrinsic role of interfaces. This lecture sheds light on recent and innovative developments unravelling metal plasticity at the micron scale. Multi-phase through-thickness samples allow for a full characterization of the underlying microstructure. Using computational crystallographic insights, a slip system based local identification method has been developed, which provides full-field crystallographic slip system activity maps. The resulting deformation maps are directly used to assess the model predictions. Heterogeneous spatial variations are introduced by sampling the slip system properties of individual atomic slip planes from a probability density function. This allows to recover naturally localized slip patterns with a high resolution. It is demonstrated that this discrete slip plane model adequately replicates the diversity of active slip systems in the corresponding experiment, which cannot be achieved with standard crystal plasticity models. Recent experimental observations on dual-phase steels demonstrate substructure boundary sliding parallel to the habit plane in lath martensite, for which a habit-plane slip enriched laminate model is developed. This model adequately captures the role of the substructure boundary sliding on the deformation of the martensite aggregate. [more]

Micro-mechanisms of deformation and failure in advanced high strength steels unraveled through full-field strain mapping

Exploration of ultra-fast time scales in metallic glasses and crystals

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