Issue |
EPJ Web of Conferences
Volume 26, 2012
DYMAT 2012 - 10th International Conference on the Mechanical and Physical Behaviour of Materials under Dynamic Loading
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Article Number | 01027 | |
Number of page(s) | 1 | |
Section | Experimental Techniques | |
DOI | https://doi.org/10.1051/epjconf/20122601027 | |
Published online | 31 August 2012 |
https://doi.org/10.1051/epjconf/20122601027
Evolution of uranium dislocation structure at different-rate deformation and different-temperature annealing
Russian Federal Nuclear Center – Zababakhin All-Russia Research Institute of Technical Physuics, Snezhinsk, Russia
The Williamson-Hall method based on analyzing the angular dependence of diffraction maximum broadening is used to study the dislocation structure. Densities of chaotically arranged dislocations on samples after their different-rate deformation are measured. Consideration is given to the dislocation structure of a spherical uranium sample after its shock-wave loading, as well as to the dislocation structure of model samples deformed at the rate of ∼ 10−3s−1 up to 5%, 20%, and 60% relative deformation. After deformation, samples were vacuum annealed at 200C, 400C, 600C, 720C, and 850C (in alpha-, beta-, and gamma-phases). Samples were cooled at the rate of ∼ 10∘/min. Results for samples subjected to different-rate deformation and different-temperature annealing are compared. In the dislocation structure of the sample recovered after shock-wave loading, special features that cannot be described with the help of mechanisms observed at the low-rate deformation and cooling were elucidated. Systematic investigations of the uranium dislocation structure at the increasing speed of loading are to be continued).
© Owned by the authors, published by EDP Sciences, 2012