Papers - Some Observations on the Recrystallization of an Iron-nickel Alloy (T.P. 1143, with discussion)

The American Institute of Mining, Metallurgical, and Petroleum Engineers
George Sachs J. Spretnak
Organization:
The American Institute of Mining, Metallurgical, and Petroleum Engineers
Pages:
9
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453 KB
Publication Date:
Jan 1, 1940

Abstract

The process of recrystallization has not as yet been explained satisfactorily. Some definite conclusions could be drawn from recent investigations, such as, for example, that recrystallization is a process of nucleus formation and crystal growth1 and that the orientations of the nuclei correspond to some fragments of the original crystals, which have been considerably distorted during deformation.2 There are, however, a number of metals and alloys crystallizing in the face-centered cubic system, which form a particularly simple orientation if recrystallized as a sheet.3 Such a shect is almost a single crystal with the cubic axes parallel to the rolling, transverse, and normal directions of the sheet. This preferred cubic or (100) orientation of the recrystallized sheet has been considered to be very different from the rolling structure of the same metals,4 but there are two reasons why this last supposition remains open to controversial discussion. The first reason is academic: In practically all cases except the one mentioned above, close correlations and similarities between rolling and annealing orientations have been observed; for instance, in iron and steel sheet.6 Secondly, no deformed metal actually forms a simple orientation. In any thoroughly investigated case a number of different orientations and considerable scattering or deviations from the ideal orientations have been found.6 It is generally true that investigations on single crystals have shown that a definite orientation is approached in stretching or in compression of an originally undisturbed crystal.7 In the special cases, however, where the initial orientation was close to an important crystallographic direction that differed from the final "ideal" orientation, the resulting orientation changed very little by deformation, staying somewhere in the vicinity of the initial orientation.8 Such deviations
Citation

APA: George Sachs J. Spretnak  (1940)  Papers - Some Observations on the Recrystallization of an Iron-nickel Alloy (T.P. 1143, with discussion)

MLA: George Sachs J. Spretnak Papers - Some Observations on the Recrystallization of an Iron-nickel Alloy (T.P. 1143, with discussion). The American Institute of Mining, Metallurgical, and Petroleum Engineers, 1940.

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