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  2. Grain boundary strengthening - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Grain_boundary_strengthening

    Figure 1: Hall–Petch strengthening is limited by the size of dislocations. Once the grain size reaches about 10 nanometres (3.9 × 10 −7 in), grain boundaries start to slide. In materials science, grain-boundary strengthening (or Hall–Petch strengthening) is a method of strengthening materials by changing their average crystallite (grain

  3. Grain boundary - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Grain_boundary

    As the grain is bent further, more and more dislocations must be introduced to accommodate the deformation resulting in a growing wall of dislocations – a low-angle boundary. The grain can now be considered to have split into two sub-grains of related crystallography but notably different orientations.

  4. Grain boundary sliding - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Grain_boundary_sliding

    There are mainly two types of grain boundary sliding: Rachinger sliding, [2] and Lifshitz sliding. [3] Grain boundary sliding usually occurs as a combination of both types of sliding. Boundary shape often determines the rate and extent of grain boundary sliding. [4] Grain boundary sliding is a motion to prevent intergranular cracks from forming.

  5. Bauschinger effect - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bauschinger_effect

    The pile-up of dislocations at grain boundaries and Orowan loops around strong precipitates are two main sources of these back stresses. When the strain direction is reversed, dislocations of the opposite sign can be produced from the same source that produced the slip-causing dislocations in the initial direction.

  6. Subgrain rotation recrystallization - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Subgrain_rotation_re...

    Subgrains are defined as grains that are oriented at a < 10–15 degree angle at the grain boundary, making it a low-angle grain boundary (LAGB). Due to the relationship between the energy versus the number of dislocations at the grain boundary, there is a driving force for fewer high-angle grain boundaries (HAGB) to form and grow instead of a ...

  7. Pinning points - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pinning_points

    Dislocations require proper lattice ordering to move through a material. At grain boundaries, there is a lattice mismatch, and every atom that lies on the boundary is uncoordinated. This stops dislocations that encounter the boundary from moving.

  8. Strengthening mechanisms of materials - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Strengthening_mechanisms...

    Dislocations may be pinned due to stress field interactions with other dislocations and solute particles, creating physical barriers from second phase precipitates forming along grain boundaries. There are five main strengthening mechanisms for metals, each is a method to prevent dislocation motion and propagation, or make it energetically ...

  9. Deformation mechanism - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Deformation_mechanism

    Bulging recrystallization often occurs along boundaries of old grains at triple junctions. At high temperatures, the growing grain has a lower dislocation density than the grain(s) consumed, and the grain boundary sweeps through the neighboring grains to remove dislocations by high-temperature grain-boundary migration crystallization.