Single crystals of γ-TiAl cannot be grown in the near-stoichiometric compositions that are present inside two-phase γ/α 2 -microstructures with attractive mechanical properties. Therefore, the single crystal constitutive behavior of γ-TiAl was studied by nanoindentation experiments in single phase regions of these γ/α 2 -microstructures. The experiments were characterized by orientation microscopy and atomic force microscopy to quantify the orientation dependent mechanical response during nanoindentation. Further, they were analyzed by a 3D crystal plasticity finite element model that incorporated the deformation behavior of γ-TiAl. The spatially resolved activation of competing deformation mechanisms during indentation was used to assess their relative strengths. A convention was defined to unambiguously relate any indentation axis to a crystallographic orientation. Experiments and simulations were combined to study the orientation dependent surface pile-up. The characteristic pile-up topographies were simulated throughout the unit triangle of γ-TiAl and represented graphically in the newly introduced inverse pole figure of pile-up patterns. Through this approach, easy activation of ordinary dislocation glide in stoichiometric γ-TiAl was confirmed independently from dislocation observation by transmission electron microscopy.
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