Institute of Metals Division - An Electron Transmission Study of Nitride Precipitation in Alpha Iron

The American Institute of Mining, Metallurgical, and Petroleum Engineers
A. S. Keh H. A. Wriedt
Organization:
The American Institute of Mining, Metallurgical, and Petroleum Engineers
Pages:
13
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1686 KB
Publication Date:
Jan 1, 1962

Abstract

The Precipitation of nitrides in quenched Fe-N alloys, aged between 25° and 200°C, was studied by transmission electron microscopy. Different dislocation substructures were introduced into the materials by recrystallization, cold working, and by Phase transformation prior to the introduction of nitrogen. It was found that the precipitated nitrides, tentatively identified as Fe16N2, have (100) habit planes. Nucleation takes place Preferentially at dislocations and at subboundaries. It sometimes occurs in the matrix, probably on vacancy clusters, but rarely on high-angle boundaries. The process of nucleation on dislocations and subboundaries is very temperature dependent. At room temperature there is no particular orientation relationship between the dislocations involved and the (100) planes on which the nitride Particles formed. With increasing temperature, the nucleation sites tend to become restricted to those dislocation segments lying in (100) planes. The change of yield stress of the 0.022 and 0.043 pet N alloys during quench aging can be correlated semiquantitatively with the change in particle distribution. Strain aging in quenched alloys can be separated into two stages. The early stage is attributed to nitrogen segregation to dislocations and the later stage is associated with precipitation. When previously quench-aged specimens were strained and aged, no additional Precipitates could be seen, although a considerable amount of strain aging occurred. DURING the past two decades, the precipitation of nitrides from a iron has been extensively studied by various techniques. It has been established that two types of nitride exist. The stable nitride, Fe4N, forms at temperatures above 250oC and Fe16N2, the
Citation

APA: A. S. Keh H. A. Wriedt  (1962)  Institute of Metals Division - An Electron Transmission Study of Nitride Precipitation in Alpha Iron

MLA: A. S. Keh H. A. Wriedt Institute of Metals Division - An Electron Transmission Study of Nitride Precipitation in Alpha Iron. The American Institute of Mining, Metallurgical, and Petroleum Engineers, 1962.

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