3 resultados para Sliding Conjunctival Flap
em Universidad Politécnica de Madrid
Resumo:
Comment on "Another look at the uniform rope sliding over the edge of a smooth table"
Resumo:
Highly-textured, rolled AZ31 sheet material shows a significant drop in the plastic anisotropy (r-value; r=εw/εt) in tension between 25°C and 200°C. This behavior was initially explained as a result of the increased activity of non-basal slip with increased temperature. Other authors suggested, however, that the mechanism resp onsible for this phenomenon was the activation of grain boundary sliding (GBS). Here, in-situ ten sile tests have been carried out in an SEM at various temperatures in order to obtain further evi dence of the role of GBS during moderate to high temperature deformation of Mg alloys, which remains highly controversial.
Resumo:
This work aims to contribute to a further understanding of the fundamentals of crystallographic slip and grain boundary sliding in the γ-TiAl Ti–45Al–2Nb–2Mn (at%)–0.8 vol%TiB2 intermetallic alloy, by means of in situ high-temperature tensile testing combined with electron backscatter diffraction (EBSD). Several microstructures, containing different fractions and sizes of lamellar colonies and equiaxed γ-grains, were fabricated by either centrifugal casting or powder metallurgy, followed by heat treatment at 1300 °C and furnace cooling. in situ tensile and tensile-creep experiments were performed in a scanning electron microscope (SEM) at temperatures ranging from 580 °C to 700 °C. EBSD was carried out in selected regions before and after straining. Our results suggest that, during constant strain rate tests, true twin γ/γ interfaces are the weakest barriers to dislocations and, thus, that the relevant length scale might be influenced by the distance between non-true twin boundaries. Under creep conditions both grain/colony boundary sliding (G/CBS) and crystallographic slip are observed to contribute to deformation. The incidence of boundary sliding is particularly high in γ grains of duplex microstructures. The slip activity during creep deformation in different microstructures was evaluated by trace analysis. Special emphasis was placed in distinguishing the compliance of different slip events with the Schmid law with respect to the applied stress.