Tailoring the surface properties of a material for low friction and little wear has long been a goal of tribological research. Since the microstructure of the material under the contact strongly influences tribological performance, the ability to control this microstructure is thereby of key importance. However, there is a significant lack of knowledge about the elementary mechanisms of microstructure evolution under tribological load. To cover different stages of this microstructure evolution, high-purity copper was investigated after increasing numbers of sliding cycles of a sapphire sphere in reciprocating motion. Scanning electron and focused ion beam (FIB) microscopy were applied to monitor the microstructure changes. A thin tribologically deformed layer which grew from tens of nanometers to several micrometers with increasing number of cycles was observed in cross-sections. By analyzing dislocation structures and local orientation changes in the cross-sectional areas, dislocation activity, the occurrence of a distinct dislocation trace line, and the emergence of new subgrain boundaries could be observed at different depths. These results strongly suggest that dislocation self-organization is a key elementary mechanism for the microstructure evolution under a tribological load. The distinct elementary processes at different stages of sliding identified here will be essential for the future modeling of the microstructure evolution in tribological contacts.
In the present work, high temperature deformation behavior of oxide dispersion strengthened T91 was investigated and linked to the corresponding microstructure. First, tensile properties are presented and discussed in terms of yield strength, tensile stress and total elongation as a function of temperature. The results are compared to the matrix material and other ODS alloys. Second, transmission electron microscopy was applied to as received and deformed tensile test specimens. It is shown that the Y2O3 particle diameter increases slightly upon deformation at elevated temperatures. Additionally, distinctive coarsening of M23C6 carbides occurs at prior austenite grain boundaries. At temperatures above 500°C, dislocations are straight and pile up at grain boundaries due to thermally activated climbing. Oxide dispersion strengthened T91 provides high strength due to strong particle/dislocation interactions and good toughness properties.
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