Creep damage by void nucleation and growth limits the lifetime of components subjected to loading at high temperatures. We report a combined tomography and diffraction experiment using high-energy synchrotron radiation that permitted us to follow in situ void growth and microstructure development in bulk samples. The results reveal that void growth versus time follows an exponential growth law. The formation of large void volumes coincides with texture evolution and dislocation density, reaching a steady state. Creep damage during a large proportion of sample creep life is homogeneous before damage localization occurs, which leads to rapid failure. The in situ determination of void evolution in bulk samples should allow for the assessment of creep damage in metallic materials and subsequently for lifetime predictions about samples and components that are subject to high-temperature loading.
Electrical resistivity, thermal expansion, and temperature-dependent x-ray diffraction measurements on compounds give mutually consistent evidence for structural phase transitions at 740 K, 550 K, 600 K, and 450 K respectively for R = Y, Sm, Gd, Tb; 0 < x < 0.05. Arguments are given as to why most of the rare-earth - nickel compounds with the 1:2 ratio do not crystallize in the simple cubic Laves phase (C15 type) but show a superstructure of the cubic Laves phase at room temperature and at ambient pressure. This superstructure with the space group and a doubled cell parameter is characterized by ordered vacancies on the R sites. It is shown that the observed structural instabilities result in transitions to the cubic Laves phase (space group ), however with disordered vacancies at high temperatures. High-pressure x-ray powder diffraction experiments show that the phase transition in shifts down to room temperature for a pressure of 27 GPa.
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