Amorphization and disordering of the Ni3Al ordered intermetallic by mechanical milling
- 1 March 1990
- journal article
- Published by Springer Nature in Journal of Materials Research
- Vol. 5 (3), 498-510
- https://doi.org/10.1557/jmr.1990.0498
Abstract
The ordered fcc intermetallic compound Ni3Al was mechanically milled in a high energy ball mill. The severe plastic deformation produced by milling induced transformations with increasing milling time as follows: ordered fcc → 2; disordered fcc → 2; nanocrystalline fcc + amorphous. The milling time for complete disordering occurred at 5 h for stoichiometric Ni3Al milled at ambient temperature compared to 50 h for the first observation of an amorphous structure. The structural and microstructural evolution with milling time was followed by x-ray diffraction, TEM, hardness, and calorimetry. The major defect believed responsible for inducing the crystalline-to-amorphous transformation is the fine grain boundary structure with nanometer (∼2 nm diameter) dimensions. The calculated interfacial free energy of the grain boundaries is consistent with the estimated free energy difference between the fcc and amorphous phases in Ni3Al.Keywords
This publication has 36 references indexed in Scilit:
- Synthesis of nickel aluminides by mechanical alloyingMaterials Letters, 1988
- Remarks on solid state amorphizing transformationsJournal of the Less Common Metals, 1988
- Synthesis and process characterization of mechanically alloyed amorphous Ni-Nb powdersJournal of the Less Common Metals, 1988
- Application of the Miedema model to formation enthalpies and crystallisation temperatures of amorphous alloysJournal of Physics F: Metal Physics, 1987
- THE STRUCTURE OF AMORPHOUS ALLOYS SYNTHESIZED BY MECHANICAL ALLOYING-NON GLASS FORMING SYSTEMSLe Journal de Physique Colloques, 1985
- Effects of 1 MeV electron irradiation on Ni3AlScripta Metallurgica, 1981
- Coupled phase diagrams and thermochemical data for transition metal binary systems — VCalphad, 1978
- The heats of formation in the system aluminium + nickel + titaniumTransactions of the Faraday Society, 1958
- Constitution of Binary AlloysJournal of the Electrochemical Society, 1958
- Elements of X-Ray DiffractionAmerican Journal of Physics, 1957