1993
DOI: 10.1016/0956-7151(93)90211-a
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On the origin of cube texture in copper

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Cited by 113 publications
(63 citation statements)
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“…Both protrusions are located at S oriented deformed matrix. As discussed in earlier work, preferential growth into S orientations may be related to either misorientations near (although not exactly at) 40°<111> [4] or higher stored energy within S oriented bands [49]. If the preferential growth is due to higher stored energy within S oriented bands, it would be expected that twins of the supercube grains would grow equally well into these S oriented bands, which is not observed experimentally for supercube grains in this sample.…”
Section: Misorientationsmentioning
confidence: 78%
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“…Both protrusions are located at S oriented deformed matrix. As discussed in earlier work, preferential growth into S orientations may be related to either misorientations near (although not exactly at) 40°<111> [4] or higher stored energy within S oriented bands [49]. If the preferential growth is due to higher stored energy within S oriented bands, it would be expected that twins of the supercube grains would grow equally well into these S oriented bands, which is not observed experimentally for supercube grains in this sample.…”
Section: Misorientationsmentioning
confidence: 78%
“…A small amount of cube texture (~2% volume fraction) is observed, which has been seen in cold-rolled copper [4] and other metals [33,34]. The cube oriented regions are usually observed as thin bands (see Figure 2a).…”
Section: Deformed Microstructure and Texturementioning
confidence: 96%
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“…In-situ/ex-situ 2D (x, y, t) characterizations Dynamic studies following in situ or ex situ the boundary migration process are crucial for understanding the migration mechanisms. The direct observations from such studies can avoid the socalled 'destroy-evidence' problem [35], and thus be used to test mechanisms or theories as those obtained based on the 2D post-mortem analysis e.g. those given in section 2.…”
Section: D Characterization Of Recrystallization Boundary Using Fibmentioning
confidence: 99%