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Microstructural and structural stability of rapidly solidified gold-titanium alloys.

An investigation has been carried out into the effect of rapid solidification on the microstructure and structural order present in dilute Au-Ti alloys, and the subsequent evolution of these properties on post-solidification heat treatment. Alloys of compositions lwt.% Ti, 2wt.% Ti, 3wt.% Ti and 5wt...

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Main Author: Van Heerden, David Peter
Other Authors: Shaw, M P
Format: Thesis
Language:English
Published: Centre for Materials Engineering 2024
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access_status_str Open Access
author Van Heerden, David Peter
author2 Shaw, M P
author_browse Shaw, M P
Van Heerden, David Peter
author_facet Shaw, M P
Van Heerden, David Peter
author_sort Van Heerden, David Peter
collection Thesis
description An investigation has been carried out into the effect of rapid solidification on the microstructure and structural order present in dilute Au-Ti alloys, and the subsequent evolution of these properties on post-solidification heat treatment. Alloys of compositions lwt.% Ti, 2wt.% Ti, 3wt.% Ti and 5wt.% Ti have been rapidly solidified by a technique known as chill block melt spinning (CBMS). The microstructure and structural order present in the alloys both directly on solidification and after post- solidification heat treatment have been characterised using optical microscopy, scanning electron microscopy and transmission electron microscopy; the evolution of the mechanical properties on post-solidification heat treatment has been determined by means of microhardness tests. The flow characteristics of the molten alloys are observed to deteriorate with increasing Ti content resulting in an increase the cooling rate experienced by the alloys during rapid solidification with increasing solute concentration. The as-solidified alloy microstructures are therefore rationalised on the basis of variations in both cooling rate during CBMS and solute content. TEM examination of the as-solidified ribbons demonstrates that alloys containing up to 3wt.% Ti exhibit little evidence of either solute segregation or the formation of the equilibrium, long-range-ordered (Dla) Au₄Ti phase. In a 5wt.% Ti alloy the (Dla) Au4Ti phase is observed to nucleate during processmg. Long-exposure electron diffraction patterns from 2wt.% Ti, 3wt.% Ti and 5wt.% Ti alloys reveal diffuse intensity maxima consistent with the presence of <1½0> special-point order, a state of order which has not been identified previously in Au-Ti alloys. On the basis of electron diffraction patterns taken from these alloys the incorporation of elements of both DO₂₂ and Dla structures within the lattice is appropriate in the description of the structural order giving rise to special-point reflections. The state of order present in the as-solidified 2wt.% Ti and 3wt.% Ti alloys is shown to be best described by incorporating both elements of <1½0> special-point order and elements of the (D1a) long-range-ordered structure. In addition, the nature and distribution of the three-dimensional diffuse streaking observed in zone-axis patterns from a variety of different orientations is discussed and interpreted. This state of order is observed to be stable up to a temperature of 335°C. The lwt.% Ti alloy contained only 0.65wt.% Ti after processing. This loss of Ti results in extensive grain growth on heat treatment at temperatures above 350°C with no detectable second phase formation; as a result the alloy microhardness decreases on heat treatment. In the 2wt.% Ti and 3wt.% Ti alloys no grain growth is observed to occur on heat treatment at temperatures of up to S00°C. On heat treatment at 350°C the Au₄Ti phase is shown to precipitate in these alloys with a commensurate increase in the alloy microhardness. However, extended heat treatment at 500°C results in the coarsening of the Au₄Ti precipitates and is associated, in some instances, with a loss of precipitate coherency and an annealing out of orientational variants of the Au₄Ti phase.
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institution University of Cape Town (South Africa)
language eng
last_indexed 2026-06-10T12:32:44.899Z
license_str Not specified — see source repository
provenance_str_mv Harvested via OAI-PMH from UCTD — University of Cape Town Open Access Repository
publishDate 2024
publishDateRange 2024
publishDateSort 2024
publisher Centre for Materials Engineering
publisherStr Centre for Materials Engineering
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source_str UCTD — University of Cape Town Open Access Repository
spelling oai:open.uct.ac.za:11427/40036 Microstructural and structural stability of rapidly solidified gold-titanium alloys. Van Heerden, David Peter Shaw, M P Materials Engineering An investigation has been carried out into the effect of rapid solidification on the microstructure and structural order present in dilute Au-Ti alloys, and the subsequent evolution of these properties on post-solidification heat treatment. Alloys of compositions lwt.% Ti, 2wt.% Ti, 3wt.% Ti and 5wt.% Ti have been rapidly solidified by a technique known as chill block melt spinning (CBMS). The microstructure and structural order present in the alloys both directly on solidification and after post- solidification heat treatment have been characterised using optical microscopy, scanning electron microscopy and transmission electron microscopy; the evolution of the mechanical properties on post-solidification heat treatment has been determined by means of microhardness tests. The flow characteristics of the molten alloys are observed to deteriorate with increasing Ti content resulting in an increase the cooling rate experienced by the alloys during rapid solidification with increasing solute concentration. The as-solidified alloy microstructures are therefore rationalised on the basis of variations in both cooling rate during CBMS and solute content. TEM examination of the as-solidified ribbons demonstrates that alloys containing up to 3wt.% Ti exhibit little evidence of either solute segregation or the formation of the equilibrium, long-range-ordered (Dla) Au₄Ti phase. In a 5wt.% Ti alloy the (Dla) Au4Ti phase is observed to nucleate during processmg. Long-exposure electron diffraction patterns from 2wt.% Ti, 3wt.% Ti and 5wt.% Ti alloys reveal diffuse intensity maxima consistent with the presence of <1½0> special-point order, a state of order which has not been identified previously in Au-Ti alloys. On the basis of electron diffraction patterns taken from these alloys the incorporation of elements of both DO₂₂ and Dla structures within the lattice is appropriate in the description of the structural order giving rise to special-point reflections. The state of order present in the as-solidified 2wt.% Ti and 3wt.% Ti alloys is shown to be best described by incorporating both elements of <1½0> special-point order and elements of the (D1a) long-range-ordered structure. In addition, the nature and distribution of the three-dimensional diffuse streaking observed in zone-axis patterns from a variety of different orientations is discussed and interpreted. This state of order is observed to be stable up to a temperature of 335°C. The lwt.% Ti alloy contained only 0.65wt.% Ti after processing. This loss of Ti results in extensive grain growth on heat treatment at temperatures above 350°C with no detectable second phase formation; as a result the alloy microhardness decreases on heat treatment. In the 2wt.% Ti and 3wt.% Ti alloys no grain growth is observed to occur on heat treatment at temperatures of up to S00°C. On heat treatment at 350°C the Au₄Ti phase is shown to precipitate in these alloys with a commensurate increase in the alloy microhardness. However, extended heat treatment at 500°C results in the coarsening of the Au₄Ti precipitates and is associated, in some instances, with a loss of precipitate coherency and an annealing out of orientational variants of the Au₄Ti phase. 2024-06-27T10:57:22Z 2024-06-27T10:57:22Z 1993 2024-06-21T12:49:19Z Thesis / Dissertation Doctoral PhD http://hdl.handle.net/11427/40036 eng application/pdf Centre for Materials Engineering Faculty of Engineering and the Built Environment
spellingShingle Materials Engineering
Van Heerden, David Peter
Microstructural and structural stability of rapidly solidified gold-titanium alloys.
thesis_degree_str Doctoral
title Microstructural and structural stability of rapidly solidified gold-titanium alloys.
title_full Microstructural and structural stability of rapidly solidified gold-titanium alloys.
title_fullStr Microstructural and structural stability of rapidly solidified gold-titanium alloys.
title_full_unstemmed Microstructural and structural stability of rapidly solidified gold-titanium alloys.
title_short Microstructural and structural stability of rapidly solidified gold-titanium alloys.
title_sort microstructural and structural stability of rapidly solidified gold titanium alloys
topic Materials Engineering
url http://hdl.handle.net/11427/40036
work_keys_str_mv AT vanheerdendavidpeter microstructuralandstructuralstabilityofrapidlysolidifiedgoldtitaniumalloys