44 resultados para Rare Earth elements (REE)

em Deakin Research Online - Australia


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A series of alloys have been produced with microalloying additions of rare-earth (RE) elements in the range of 0.1–0.4 wt.%. The alloys have been extruded to produce grain sizes of 23 ± 5 μm. The texture of the extruded alloys was measured, and it was found that the extrusion texture was weakened by the addition of RE elements. The samples with weakened extrusion textures exhibited an increase in the tensile elongation.

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The static recrystallisation behaviour of two magnesium alloys after hot rolling have been examined. The alloys chosen for study were the conventional alloy AZ31, and an alloy containing the rare earth element Gadolinium. The recrystallisation kinetics were lower for the rareearth alloy at low annealing temperatures, but at high annealing temperatures the kinetics were higher for the rare-earth alloy. It is suggested that this change in the comparative recrystallisation kinetics is a result of the improved mobility of the rare-earth solute at higher temperatures. This affects the recrystallisation kinetics through solute partitioning to the grain boundaries. The effect of this segregation on the recrystallisation texture is also discussed.

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The extrusion behaviour, texture and tensile ductility of five binary Mg-based alloys have been examined and compared to pure Mg. The five alloying additions examined were Al, Sn, Ca, La and Gd. When these alloys are compared at equivalent grain size, the La- and Gd-containing alloys show the best ductilities. This has been attributed to a weaker extrusion texture. These two alloying additions, La and Gd, were found to also produce a new texture peak with View the MathML source parallel to the extrusion direction. This “rare earth texture” component was found to be suppressed at high extrusion temperatures. It is proposed that the View the MathML source texture component arises from oriented nucleation at shear bands.

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This data collection addresses the problem of low ductility in magnesium alloys, preventing their wider use. It examines a series of dilute alloys in order to determine the effect of composition on the extrusion behaviour and texture, and on the room temperature tensile ductility.

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Anhydrous rare earth tris(cinnamates) [RE(cinn)3] (RE = La–Lu, Y and Sc and cinnH = trans-cinnamic acid) were prepared by metathesis in water and by direct reaction of the metal with cinnamic acid in a 1,2,4,5-tetramethylbenzene flux at ca. 200 °C. X-ray crystal structure determinations and X-ray powder data show that, in the solid state, the larger lanthanoids (La–Dy) form an isomorphous polymeric series consisting of homoleptic nine-coordinate metal centres bonded to three chelating and bridging tridentate cinnamates. The late REIII cinnamate (RE = Dy, Ho–Lu, Y) complexes also form linear one-dimensional polymeric chains with all RE metal atoms being seven-coordinate. The cinnamates are either bound tridentate bridging in a μ-η2:η1 fashion, or μ-η1:η1syn-syn bidentate bridging. A structural break occurs at dysprosium which has been characterised in both crystallographic forms, and gives solely the late RE form when precipitated at 80 °C. ScIII cinnamate was also isolated as an analytically pure precipitate which was, again, found to be anhydrous in nature. A structural change was identified by powder XRD between the late REIII cinnamates and ScIII cinnamate.

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Localised corrosion is typical on AA2024-T3 due to intermetallic particles embedded in the alloy. The effect of intermetallic compositions on corrosion are not yet fully understood. EPMA data on AA2024-T3 surfaces before and after a 16. min immersion, analyses the influence of intermetallic clustering on the severity attack at local sites. While sites with a high number of domains and a large S-phase surface area typically lead to severe attack, maximising these features did not always lead to severe corrosion attack. Cerium or praseodymium mercaptoacetate inhibited corrosion ring formation. The common trends observed from such attack sites was also discussed.

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De-alloying of S-phase in AA2024-T3 in the presence chlorides, is well-known. However, it is unclear how rare earth mercaptoacetate inhibitors affect this process when immersed in a 0.1. M NaCl solution. This paper analyses data obtained using EPMA on AA2024-T3 surfaces before and after a 16. min immersion period. Cerium and praseodymium mercaptoacetate inhibited the de-alloying process of S-phase particles. Although no significant change in composition was observed for cathodic intermetallics, each appeared to participate in local corrosion reactions as evidenced by the development of surface oxides. Clustering between S-phase and one of the Cu-containing intermetallic domains was also evident.

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Corrosion inhibitors are an important method for minimizing corrosion; however traditional inhibitors such as chromates pose environmental problems. Rare earth metals provide an important, environmentally-friendly alternative. This book provides a comprehensive review of current research and examines how rare earth metals can be used to prevent corrosion and applied to protect metals in such industries as aerospace and construction. Chapter 1 begins by examining the important need to replace chromate, and then goes on to discuss the chemistry of the rare earth metals and their related compounds. Chapter 2 considers the techniques that can be used to identify corrosion inhibition mechanisms and to test the levels of protection offered to different metals by rare earth compounds. Subsequent chapters consider in more detail how rare earth elements can be used as corrosion inhibitors in different forms and for different metals. This includes discussion on the potential of rare earth elements for self-healing, tunable and multifunctional coatings. Finally, chapter 10 considers the cost and availability of the rare earths and the potential health and environmental risks associated with extracting them. Provides a review of current research and examines how rare earth metals can be used to prevent corrosion and applied to protect metals in such industries as aerospace and construction. Includes discussion on the potential of rare earth elements for self-healing, tunable and multifunctional coatings. Considers the cost and availability of the rare earths and the potential health and environmental risks associated with extracting them.