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In-situ neutron diffraction study of lattice deformation behaviour of commercially pure titanium at cryogenic temperature

Scientific Reports 2022 19 citations ? Citation count from OpenAlex, updated daily. May differ slightly from the publisher's own count. Score: 35 ? 0–100 AI score estimating relevance to the microplastics field. Papers below 30 are filtered from public browse.
Minsu Lee, Takuro Kawasaki, Takayuki Yamashita, Stefanus Harjo, Yong‐Taek Hyun, Youngung Jeong, Tea‐Sung Jun

Summary

Researchers used neutron diffraction — a technique that tracks how atomic structures stretch under stress — to study how commercially pure titanium deforms at extremely cold temperatures down to near absolute zero. They found that more twinning (a type of crystal rearrangement) at lower temperatures helps explain why titanium becomes surprisingly more ductile in cryogenic conditions.

Titanium has a significant potential for the cryogenic industrial fields such as aerospace and liquefied gas storage and transportation due to its excellent low temperature properties. To develop and advance the technologies in cryogenic industries, it is required to fully understand the underlying deformation mechanisms of Ti under the extreme cryogenic environment. Here, we report a study of the lattice behaviour in grain families of Grade 2 CP-Ti during in-situ neutron diffraction test in tension at temperatures of 15-298 K. Combined with the neutron diffraction intensity analysis, EBSD measurements revealed that the twinning activity was more active at lower temperature, and the behaviour was complicated with decreasing temperature. The deviation of linearity in the lattice strains was caused by the load-redistribution between plastically soft and hard grain families, resulting in the three-stage hardening behaviour. The lattice strain behaviour further deviated from linearity with decreasing temperature, leading to the transition of plastically soft-to-hard or hard-to-soft characteristic of particular grain families at cryogenic temperature. The improvement of ductility can be attributed to the increased twinning activity and a significant change of lattice deformation behaviour at cryogenic temperature.

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