Recrystallization and Related Annealing Phenomena

Front Cover
Recrystallization and Related Annealing Phenomena fulfils the information needs of materials scientists in both industry and academia. The subjects treated in the book are all active research areas, forming a major part of at least four regular international conference series. This new 2nd edition ensures the reader has access to the latest findings, essential to those working at the forefront of research in universities and laboratories. For those in industry, the book highlights applications of the research and technologically important examples. In particular, the second edition builds on the significant progress made recently in the following key areas: - Deformed state, including deformation to very large strains - Characterisation of microstructures by electron backscatter diffraction (EBSD) - Modelling and simulation of annealing - Continuous recrystallization - Fully revised and up-to-date, the second edition highlights the significant progress made recently in this important area of research - Detailed coverage, much more comprehensive treatment than is found in textbooks on physical metallurgy bridges the gap between theory and practice by examining the application of quantitative, physically based models to metal forming processes
 

Contents

Chapter 1 INTRODUCTION
1
Chapter 2 THE DEFORMED STATE
11
Chapter 3 DEFORMATION TEXTURES
67
Chapter 4 THE STRUCTURE AND ENERGY OF GRAIN BOUNDARIES
91
Chapter 5 THE MOBILITY AND MIGRATION OF BOUNDARIES
121
Chapter 6 RECOVERY AFTER DEFORMATION
169
Chapter 7 RECRYSTALLIZATION OF SINGLEPHASE ALLOYS
215
Chapter 8 RECRYSTALLIZATION OF ORDERED MATERIALS
269
122 The nature of recrystallization textures
380
123 The theory of recrystallization textures
393
124 The evolution of textures during annealing
403
Chapter 13 HOT DEFORMATION AND DYNAMIC RESTORATION
415
Chapter 14 CONTINUOUS RECRYSTALLIZATION DURING AND AFTER LARGE STRAIN DEFORMATION
451
Chapter 15 CONTROL OF RECRYSTALLIZATION
469
Chapter 16 COMPUTER MODELLING AND SIMULATION OF ANNEALING
507
Appendix 1 TEXTURE
527

Chapter 9 RECRYSTALLIZATION OF TWOPHASE ALLOYS
285
Chapter 10 THE GROWTH AND STABILITY OF CELLULAR MICROSTRUCTURES
321
Chapter 11 GRAIN GROWTH FOLLOWING RECRYSTALLIZATION
333
Chapter 12 RECRYSTALLIZATION TEXTURES
379
Appendix 2 THE MEASUREMENT OF RECRYSTALLIZATION
541
REFERENCES
557
SUBJECT INDEX
617
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About the author (2004)

Prof. Rollett has been a Professor of Materials Science & Engineering at Carnegie Mellon University (CMU) since 1995 and was the Department Head 1995-2000. Prior to CMU he worked for the University of California at the Los Alamos National Laboratory (1979-1995). He spent ten years in management with five years as a Group Leader (and then Deputy Division Director) at Los Alamos, followed by five years as Department Head at CMU (1995-2000). The main focus of his research is on the measurement and computational prediction of microstructural evolution especially in three dimensions. His interests include strength of materials, constitutive relations, microstructure, texture, anisotropy, grain growth, recrystallization, formability and stereology.He was the Chair of the International Conference on Texture (ICOTOM-15), which was held on campus at CMU June, 2008 and is a member of its International Scientific Committee. From 2001-2013 he was the Chair of the International Committee of the conference on Grain Growth and Recrystallization that is held every three years; the next meeting will be in Pittsburgh in 2016. He was a co-Chair of the 13th International Conference on Aluminum and its Applications, which was held on campus at CMU in June 2012. He is a co-author of the texture analysis package popLA, and the polycrystal plasticity code, LApp; he is also a contributor to the Dream.3D software package and the well-known textbook Texture & Anisotropy edited by Kocks, Tomé and Wenk.Gregory S. Rohrer is the W.W. Mullins Professor of Materials Science and Engineering, the Head of the Materials Science and Engineering Department, and former Director of the NSF sponsored Materials Research Science and Engineering Center at Carnegie Mellon University. He received his bachelor's degree in Physics from Franklin and Marshall College in 1984 and his Ph.D. in Materials Science and Engineering from the University of Pennsylvania in 1989. He is the author of over 240 publications and has received the following awards: National Science Foundation Young Investigator Award (1994), Roland B. Snow Award of the American Ceramic Society (1998), Ross Coffin Purdy Award of the American Ceramic Society (2002), Fellow of the American Ceramic Society (2003), the Richard M. Fulrath Award of the American Ceramic Society (2004), the Robert B. Sosman Award of the American Ceramic Society (2009), a Sapphire Prize from the Journal of Materials Science (2011), and the W. David Kingery Award of the American Ceramic Society (2014). Rohrer gave the Lawley lecture at Drexel University in 2005, the Winchell Lecture at Purdue University in 2007, and the GE Distinguished Lecture for MS&E at Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute in 2009. Rohrer is an Associate Editor of the Journal of the American Ceramic Society, was the chair of the Basic Science Division of the American Ceramic Society in 2005, and chaired the University Materials Council in 2011.

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