Table of Contents
- 1 What causes mechanical twinning?
- 2 What is twinning plane in FCC metals?
- 3 Why are FCC metals more ductile than BCC?
- 4 Why is mechanical twin less common in FCC?
- 5 What is twin axis?
- 6 What is twin plane crystallography?
- 7 Is FCC or BCC more dense?
- 8 Why mehanical twin does not form readily in FCC or BCC?
- 9 Why does slip occur in FCC and bcc crystals?
- 10 What is the difference between mechanical twinning and annealing?
What causes mechanical twinning?
Twinning may be produced by mechanical deformation or as the result of annealing following plastic deformation. High strain rates, low stacking-fault energy and low temperatures facilitate deformation twinning. Twinning is polar (unidirectional), while slip usually is not. Twinning is also known as mechanical twinning.
What is twinning plane in FCC metals?
[1,2] Within an fcc lattice, a twin boundary is defined as a (111) plane at which the normal ABCABC stacking sequence reverses forming a (111) mirror plane.
Why are FCC crystals easily deformable?
A face-centered cubic crystal structure will deform more readily under load before breaking than a body-centered cubic structure. The FCC lattice is both cubic and closely packed and forms more ductile materials.
Why are FCC metals more ductile than BCC?
Even though both FCC and BCC have equal number of slip systems present in the structure, FCC is more ductile. Because the slip planes in the FCC structure are of the closest packing. This is not true for BCC. This means that, the \%empty space in a plane is higher in BCC.
Why is mechanical twin less common in FCC?
Twins formed by lattice shear due to mechanical working are identified as deformation twins bearing lenticular shape. Deformation twins form rarely in FCC metals with high symmetry, because frequently available slip prevents the shear stress from rising to the higher value needed for twinning.
What is the difference between mechanical and annealing twins?
There is a lot of strain energy associated with the formation of a mechanical twin, whose shape is determined strictly by the need to minimise strain energy. This contrasts with annealing twins where the shape is determined by the need to minimise interfacial energy.
What is twin axis?
Definition of twin-axis : the axis common to both individuals of a twin crystal.
What is twin plane crystallography?
Crystal twinning occurs when two separate crystals share some of the same crystal lattice points in a symmetrical manner. The surface along which the lattice points are shared in twinned crystals is called a composition surface or twin plane. Crystallographers classify twinned crystals by a number of twin laws.
Why is FCC brittle?
When ionic bonds dissociate a crack forms and the material fails in a brittle manner. FCC has 12 slip planes with 4 closest packed planes {111} and 3 closest packed directions per plane <110>.
Is FCC or BCC more dense?
Because FCC atoms are arranged more closely together than BCC atoms, FCC metals will tend to be more dense and more stable. This is a very broad rule, however! Tungsten, one of the densest metals, is BCC. However, you can do one classic experiment to see the density change between BCC and FCC.
Why mehanical twin does not form readily in FCC or BCC?
Mehanical twin does not form readily in FCC or BCC because they have sufficient slip systems unlike HCP that posses only 3 slip systems. But under certain circumstances (as mentioned in the second point above) it occurs in FCC or BCC crystal systems as well.
What is twinning twinning deformation mode?
Twinning is a major deformation mode in fcc metals with γSFE < 25 mJ/m 2 and in all hexagonal metals. It may also occur in fcc metals with high values of γSFE and in bcc metals if deformation occurs at low temperatures or high strain rates.
Why does slip occur in FCC and bcc crystals?
But under certain circumstances (as mentioned in the second point above) it occurs in FCC or BCC crystal systems as well. Twinning happens because twinning stress becomes much lower than the stress for slip under low temperatures and conditions of high strain rate.
What is the difference between mechanical twinning and annealing?
The mechanical twins are fine formations that could be seen only in TEM while annealing ones are usually the size of a grain. FCC metals are not ordinarily deform by mechanical twinning, although gold-silver alloys twin fairly when deformed at low temperature.