1958
DOI: 10.1063/1.1723404
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Investigation of Low-Temperature Internal Friction

Abstract: The internal friction in pure copper, in copper doped with nickel and gold, and in magnesium, subjected to various amounts of cold work was measured at 40 kc from 4°K to 300°K. Cold work produces a Bordoni relaxation peak in copper at approximately 80°K. The peak position is independent of the amplitude of vibration for strain amplitudes less than 3×10−5. Suitable annealing reduces and eliminates the peak, as does the presence of relatively large quantities of impurities. Increased cold work and impurity addit… Show more

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Cited by 89 publications
(41 citation statements)
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“…The Deak is either completelyabsent, or very small, as is shown by the measurements of Briggs (1955) and Caswell (1958) on single crystals and of Wilks (1957, 1959a)on polycrystalline material. Small amounts of plastic deformation produce a small peak superposed on a background of internal friction similar to that observed in the annealed material.…”
Section: The Effect Of Cold Workmentioning
confidence: 91%
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“…The Deak is either completelyabsent, or very small, as is shown by the measurements of Briggs (1955) and Caswell (1958) on single crystals and of Wilks (1957, 1959a)on polycrystalline material. Small amounts of plastic deformation produce a small peak superposed on a background of internal friction similar to that observed in the annealed material.…”
Section: The Effect Of Cold Workmentioning
confidence: 91%
“…The results of lqiblett and Wilks (1957), Caswell (1958) and Pard (1958) all show that the internal friction associated with the Bordoni peak is approximately independent of the strain amplitude= The greatest range of strain amplitudes has been investigated by Caswell, who used values ranging from 9.3 × 10 -9 to 3-7 x 10 -~ in a specimen wkich had been deformed 5 % by rolling ( fig. 10).…”
Section: Dependence On Strain Amplitudementioning
confidence: 93%
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“…[18] This material parameter is used extensively for obtaining material characteristics such as lattice-defect structure, phase transformation, glass transition, recrystallization, solid solubility limit, impurities, diffusion, and others. The origin of internal friction can be classified broadly into following categories: [10] (a) point defect, [19] (b) dislocation, [20] (c) grain boundary, [21] (d) complex defect, and (e) quantum effect. Except for the case of (e), which is related to tunneling effect at cryogenic temperature range, other origins are involved in mechanical-relaxation phenomenon of defects in thermally-activated process, scattering of wave energies, and some dynamic interactions.…”
Section: A Viscoelasticitymentioning
confidence: 99%