TY - JOUR
T1 - Effect of boron and carbon addition on high temperature deformation behavior of β-silicon carbide
AU - Kawahara, K.
AU - Tsurekawa, S.
AU - Nakashima, H.
N1 - Copyright:
Copyright 2020 Elsevier B.V., All rights reserved.
PY - 1999
Y1 - 1999
N2 - β-Silicon carbides (SiC) sintered without any sintering aids and with B and C addition were deformed by compression at high temperatures and observed by transmission electron microscopy to reveal the effect of B and C addition on the high temperature deformation behavior of β-SiC. The main results obtained are as follows. It was found that addition of B and C resulted in remarkable change in high temperature deformation behavior of β-SiC; flow stress was markedly decreased and stress oscillation took place on the stress-strain curves. The effect of B and C addition was likely to occur owing to decrease in the stacking fault energy. That is, change in the magnitude of stacking fault energy must have affected the characteristics of glide motion for partial dislocations. Furthermore, since the contribution of the effective stress to flow stress would be high during high temperature deformation of SiC because of its high Peierls' barrier, the flow stress oscillation probably resulted from the combination of the worksoftening due to Johnston-Gilman mechanism and the work-hardening due to dynamic recrystallization (DRX). It is evident that the addition of B and C increases the ability of plastic deformation governed by dislocation motion. Therefore, superplasticity would be expected to occur by homogeneous plastic deformation without a contribution of such heterogeneous deformation as grain boundary sliding.
AB - β-Silicon carbides (SiC) sintered without any sintering aids and with B and C addition were deformed by compression at high temperatures and observed by transmission electron microscopy to reveal the effect of B and C addition on the high temperature deformation behavior of β-SiC. The main results obtained are as follows. It was found that addition of B and C resulted in remarkable change in high temperature deformation behavior of β-SiC; flow stress was markedly decreased and stress oscillation took place on the stress-strain curves. The effect of B and C addition was likely to occur owing to decrease in the stacking fault energy. That is, change in the magnitude of stacking fault energy must have affected the characteristics of glide motion for partial dislocations. Furthermore, since the contribution of the effective stress to flow stress would be high during high temperature deformation of SiC because of its high Peierls' barrier, the flow stress oscillation probably resulted from the combination of the worksoftening due to Johnston-Gilman mechanism and the work-hardening due to dynamic recrystallization (DRX). It is evident that the addition of B and C increases the ability of plastic deformation governed by dislocation motion. Therefore, superplasticity would be expected to occur by homogeneous plastic deformation without a contribution of such heterogeneous deformation as grain boundary sliding.
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U2 - 10.4028/www.scientific.net/msf.304-306.519
DO - 10.4028/www.scientific.net/msf.304-306.519
M3 - Article
AN - SCOPUS:25344439103
SN - 0255-5476
VL - 304-306
SP - 519
EP - 524
JO - Materials Science Forum
JF - Materials Science Forum
ER -