This is a study of the effect of quasihydrostatic extrusion at liquid nitrogen and room temperatures on the evolution of the structure and mechanical properties of high-purity titanium produced by severe plastic deformation in a swaging-extrusion-drawing regime and with subsequent annealing at temperatures of 350–550 °C. It is shown that a combination of severe plastic deformation and cryogenic quasihydrostatic extrusion makes it possible to create high-purity nanocrystalline titanium with high strength and plasticity.
The temperature dependences of the logarithmic decrement and dynamic Young’s modulus of polycrystalline coarse-grained and nanostructured Zr are studied at temperatures of 2.5–340K. A nanostructured state of samples with grain sizes on the order of 100nm was produced by intensive plastic deformation (IPD). The measurements were made using a two-component vibrator technique at frequencies of 73–350kHz. A relaxation peak in the internal friction near 250K was discovered in the coarse-grained, annealed Zr which is retained after IPD, but its height increases by roughly a factor of 10 and the localization temperature shifts to lower values. In addition, after IPD a new internal friction peak shows up at moderately low temperatures near 80K. The activation parameters for the observed peaks are estimated and it is shown that they arise from different thermally activated dislocation processes: interactions of dislocations with impurities and kink pair formation in dislocations. It was found that IPD is accompanied by a significant (1–8%) reduction in the Young’s modulus because of quasistatic and dynamic dislocation effects. A glass-like anomaly appears in the temperature dependence of the Young’s modulus of nanostructured Zr at T<20K which may be determined by tunnelling and thermally activated relaxation of quasilocal excitations.
scite is a Brooklyn-based organization that helps researchers better discover and understand research articles through Smart Citations–citations that display the context of the citation and describe whether the article provides supporting or contrasting evidence. scite is used by students and researchers from around the world and is funded in part by the National Science Foundation and the National Institute on Drug Abuse of the National Institutes of Health.