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Pure copper was deformed at ultra-high strain-rates by the technique of cold spraying. It was found that after annealing the hard-
ness of the samples does not fall as low as is known for heavily deformed copper at normal strain rates, e.g., cold rolling. The reason
for this is the presence of defects that do not heal out after annealing at 600 °C. These defects were identified as dislocation loops of
the extrinsic and intrinsic kind. Possible mechanisms for the formation of these loops are discussed.
Titre original
Formation of persistent dislocation loops by ultra-high strain-rate deformation during cold spraying
Pure copper was deformed at ultra-high strain-rates by the technique of cold spraying. It was found that after annealing the hard-
ness of the samples does not fall as low as is known for heavily deformed copper at normal strain rates, e.g., cold rolling. The reason
for this is the presence of defects that do not heal out after annealing at 600 °C. These defects were identified as dislocation loops of
the extrinsic and intrinsic kind. Possible mechanisms for the formation of these loops are discussed.
Pure copper was deformed at ultra-high strain-rates by the technique of cold spraying. It was found that after annealing the hard-
ness of the samples does not fall as low as is known for heavily deformed copper at normal strain rates, e.g., cold rolling. The reason
for this is the presence of defects that do not heal out after annealing at 600 °C. These defects were identified as dislocation loops of
the extrinsic and intrinsic kind. Possible mechanisms for the formation of these loops are discussed.
Formation of persistent dislocation loops by ultra-high
strain-rate deformation during cold spraying
Christine Borchers * , Frank Gartner, Thorsten Stoltenho, Heinrich Kreye Department of Mechanical Engineering, Helmut Schmidt University, D-22039 Hamburg, Germany Received 27 January 2005; received in revised form 14 February 2005; accepted 17 February 2005 Available online 19 April 2005 Abstract Pure copper was deformed at ultra-high strain-rates by the technique of cold spraying. It was found that after annealing the hard- ness of the samples does not fall as low as is known for heavily deformed copper at normal strain rates, e.g., cold rolling. The reason for this is the presence of defects that do not heal out after annealing at 600 C. These defects were identied as dislocation loops of the extrinsic and intrinsic kind. Possible mechanisms for the formation of these loops are discussed. 2005 Acta Materialia Inc. Published by Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved. Keywords: Cold spraying; High-resolution electron microscopy; High-speed deformation; Point defects; Hardness 1. Introduction When copper undergoes heavy deformation and sub- sequent annealing, the temperature dependence of phys- ical properties like Vickers hardness and resistivity is well known, if the strain rate is lower than about 100/s [1]. In that regime, the mechanisms of formation and migration of dislocations upon deformation are well understood [2,3]. High strain-rate deformation of cop- per has also been studied extensively [412]. Most of these studies focus on dynamic recrystallization, disloca- tion arrangement, and deformation twinning. As early as 1962, Hornbogen reported shock-induced dislocation loops in aFe [13]. Meyers and co-workers [12] observed a large number of dislocation loops after laser-induced shock compression. To our knowledge, no annealing studies of copper after shock loading have been per- formed until now. Cold spraying (CS) is a coating technique, where bonding of particles is due to extensive plastic deforma- tion and resulting phenomena at the interface [14 19,10,11]. In this process, solid particles smaller than 50 lm are introduced into a stream of inert gas before being accelerated in a convergingdiverging de Laval type nozzle. The particles reach velocities ranging typi- cally from 500 to 1000 m/s and build up dense coatings only due to their kinetic energy upon impact. As was shown in extensive modelling of the process [20], in the rst 200 ns after impact stresses reach up to about 0.5 GPa and strains up to about 10, corresponding to strain rates of 10 6 /s to 5 10 9 /s. These values are strongly dependent on the distance from the interface, and the location on the circumference of the spherical impinging particle [20]. In Fig. 1, a Cu particle 50 ns after impinging on a Cu substrate is sketched. The contours indicate iso-strains. Strain values in the contact surface vary continuously and reach their max- imum at the equator (marked A), whereas they are smallest at the south pole (S). The quality of the strain exhibits an analoguous behaviour: at the equator it has a large amount of shear components, at the south 1359-6454/$30.00 2005 Acta Materialia Inc. Published by Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved. doi:10.1016/j.actamat.2005.02.048 * Corresponding author. Present adress: Institute of Materials Physics, University of Go ttingen, D-37077 Go ttingen, Germany. Tel.: +49 551 395 584; fax: +49 551 395 012. E-mail address: chris@ump.gwdg.de (C. Borchers). Acta Materialia 53 (2005) 29913000 www.actamat-journals.com pole it is mostly compressive. Near the equator, where the temperature approaches the melting point, the mod- elling suggests that the material loses its shear strength and there is a decrease in stress going along with a change from plastic to viscous ow [20]. This adiabatic shear instability is accompanied by the occurrence of a fast travelling material jet, as is indicated near A in Fig. 1, and is well known from, e.g., explosive welding [2123]. The microstructure of cold sprayed copper coatings has been extensively studied, showing a wide range of dierent features [11,24,25], ranging from dislocation walls to nanosized grains formed during dynamic recrys- tallization to rather large defect-free grains formed by recrystallization during cooling of the coatings. This work will focus on the occurrence of vacancy and self- interstitial type dislocation loops in CS Cu coatings. Since such loops were in the past mainly studied after irradiation of the material [2631], the results obtained in this study and the discussion in the light of the corre- sponding literature should supply a more general under- standing of that type of lattice defect. 2. Experimental Copper coatings were cold sprayed by using nitrogen as process and carrier gas. To obtain a maximum depo- sition eciency and dense coatings, preheating of the process gas to 300 C and a gas inlet pressure of 3.0 MPa were required. As feedstock, gas atomized 99.8% pure Cu-powder with an oxygen content of less than 0.1 wt.% in the size range between 5 and 25 lm was used. More general aspects of the coating technique are reported in [1416,19]. The coatings were annealed isochronically for 1 h at 100600 C in steps of 100 to investigate the thermal inuence on defect density and coating performance. Moreover, a set of coatings was, after annealing for 1 h at 600 C, cold rolled to 90% size reduction and then subjected to the same annealing pro- gramme again to study the stability of intrinsic defects. Three states were investigated by transmission electron microscopy (TEM): the as-sprayed, after 1 h annealing at 600 C, and the cold rolled state after annealing. The macroscopic eect of annealing treatment on CS Cu coatings was studied by Vickers hardness measure- ments and resistivity measurements, both carried out at room temperature. Microstructural investigations were performed by scanning electron microscopy (SEM), TEM, and high- resolution transmission electron microscopy (HRTEM). To investigate the sprayed coatings by TEM and HRTEM, discs of 3 mm diameter were punched from sheets of the coatings, and then polished, dimpled, and ion milled. SEM was performed with a Philips XL40, TEM was performed with a Philips EM420 ST, and HRTEM was performed with a Philips CM200 FEG. Hardness measurements on all samples were performed according to Vickers under a load of 2.943 N (HV 0.3). Hardness measurements were carried out under the standard DIN 50133 (now DIN EN ISO 6507), the val- ues were gained over 10 readings. The load was chosen to obtain overall information about the samples; inden- tations had a diameter of about 20 lm or larger, i.e., most indentations covered more than one powder parti- cle. The standard deviation of hardness measurements was <2%. Resistivity measurements were performed with a four-point device using a Digistant 6425 precision current-generator and a Keithley 181 nanovoltmeter and a measured section of 5 mm. 3. Results Fig. 2 shows the microstructure of the feedstock pow- der. The powder particles are spherical with the size range given above, see the SEM micrograph Fig. 2(a). The microstructure of a feedstock particle as obtained by TEM is shown in Fig. 2(b), where a very high-dislo- cation density and a grain size of several microns are revealed. In Fig. 3(a), the Vickers hardness of dierent Cu sam- ples after isochronic annealing is shown. The straight line shows the hardness of an as-sprayed coating, the dashed line represents the hardness of a bulk Cu sheet, cold rolled to 90%, and the dotted line represents the hardness of a CS sample after annealing for 1 h at 600 C and subsequent cold rolling to 90%. All three curves illustrate a decrease in hardness with rising annealing temperature. The initial hardness of the as- sprayed CS coating is somewhat higher than that of Fig. 1. Sketch of a Cu particle 50 ns after impinging on a Cu substrate. The contours indicate iso-strains. It can be seen that at the south pole, marked S, the strain is mostly compressive but appreciably smaller than near the equator, marked A. Here, the strain is highest, moreover it is shear strain. 2992 C. Borchers et al. / Acta Materialia 53 (2005) 29913000 the cold rolled sheet or the annealed and rolled CS sam- ple. The as-sprayed as well as the annealed and rolled CS samples feature a residual hardness after heat treat- ment at 600 C that is almost twice as high as the corre- sponding residual hardness of the cold rolled Cu sheets. In all three cases, a marked decrease in hardness is ob- served between 100 and 200 C. Fig. 3(b) shows the resistivity of CS Cu coatings at RT after dierent iso- chronic annealing treatments. Both the hardness and the electrical resistivity fall after annealing, but the resid- ual resistivity after annealing at 600 C is only about 10% higher than the value for bulk Cu, shown as a straight horizontal line in the diagram. The TEM-micrographs, Fig. 4, show the microstruc- ture of an as-sprayed copper coating. Fig. 4(a) is an overview. A particleparticle boundary is indicated by black arrows. The wide range of dierent microstruc- tural features mentioned above is clearly illustrated. Some grains are nanosized, whereas others are microm- eter-sized. Some of the latter, indicated by white arrows, exhibit coee-bean-like contrast. A close-up of such a grain can be seen in Fig. 4(b). The coee-beans are aligned on crystallographic planes. The local density of these defects can be estimated to 10 23 /m 3 , but it was not possible to establish a reliable size distribution for these defects in the as-sprayed state. The regions show- ing such coee-beans have a very low dislocation den- sity. The volume fraction of areas with loops can be estimated as roughly 25%, though as always with TEM the total examined volume is very small. In the TEM micrographs of Fig. 5 the microstruc- ture of a cold sprayed copper coating after heat-treat- ment for 1 h at 600 C is shown. As shown in the overview Fig. 5(a), there are no more nanosized grains, but a rather more recrystallized microstructure with micrometer-sized grains and recrystallization twins. Some of the grains exhibit a coee-bean-like contrast, similar to that of the as-sprayed coating, as marked with a white arrow. Fig. 5(b) shows a close- up. The local defect density seems to be somewhat smaller than in the as-sprayed sample, estimated as 3 10 22 /m 3 . The TEM micrographs in Fig. 6 show the microstruc- ture of a coating that was cold rolled to 90% after annealing for 1 h at 600 C. Here, the grain size is on Fig. 3. Physical properties of Cu samples at RT and after isochronic annealing for 1 h at 100600 C in steps of 100 and subsequent cooling to RT: (a) Vickers hardness. The straight line represents an as- sprayed coating, the dashed line a bulk sheet cold rolled to 90%, and the dotted line represents a CS sample after annealing for 1 h at 600 C and subsequent cold rolling to 90%; (b) RT resistivity of CS Cu. The resistivity of bulk Cu is given by a straight horizontal line. Fig. 2. Powder microstructures: (a) SEM image of the Cu feedstock powder; (b) microstructure of a feedstock particle as shown by TEM. A very high dislocation density and a grain size of several microns are revealed. C. Borchers et al. / Acta Materialia 53 (2005) 29913000 2993 the order of some 100 nm, and the dislocation density is again very high. Some grains, like the one marked with an arrow, exhibit a coee-bean-like contrast, very much like in the as-sprayed and the annealed coatings. A close-up can be seen in Fig. 6(b). Again the coee-beans correlate with a low dislocation density. The defect den- sity can be roughly estimated to be 10 22 /m 3 , although it is dicult to determine exact values within the small ob- served volumes. Fig. 7 shows HRTEM images of two of the coee- bean-like contrasts in the sample shown in Fig. 6. The lattice spacing is Cu {111}. In both micrographs, dislo- cation loops can be seen. Fig. 7(a) shows an intrinsic loop, Fig. 7(b), an extrinsic one. Both loops have an extension of about 3.5 nm. Because of restricted tilting in the electron microscope, it is not possible to deter- mine unambiguously the exact Burgers vectors and ha- bit planes of the loops. 4. Discussion The development of the hardness of deformed bulk copper upon annealing is well understood. In the tem- perature range up to 100200 C, the initially high hardness barely changes, while at temperatures between 100 and 400 C, there is an abrupt decrease in hardness [1]. This decrease in hardness is attributed to primary recrystallization [1], and the respective recrystallization temperatures are determined by purity, the amount of Fig. 4. TEM-micrographs of the microstructure of an as-sprayed Cu coating. (a) Overview. A particleparticle boundary is indicated by black arrows. Some grains are nanosized, whereas others are micrometer-sized. Some of the latter, indicated by white arrows, exhibit coee-bean-like contrast. (b) Close-up of a grain with coee-bean contrast. 2994 C. Borchers et al. / Acta Materialia 53 (2005) 29913000 strain, and the initial microstructure of the copper. The same abrupt decrease in hardness is also found for CS Cu, see Fig. 3(a). Here too, primary recrystallization is observed, as can be seen when Fig. 4(a) (as-sprayed) is compared to Fig. 5(a) (annealed for 1 h at 600 C). It was somewhat surprising, however, to nd that the hardness of cold sprayed copper coatings does not fall to a value comparable to that of cold rolled bulk Cu after annealing at 600 C. The distinguishing micro- structural feature of the as-sprayed coatings compared to cold rolled bulk metal is the existence of numerous dislocation loops in the sprayed coatings, even after heat treatment. This can explain high residual hardness of the coatings. When dislocation loops are generated in Cu by irradiation with neutrons, protons or ions, hardening due to these loops was reported long ago, e.g., by McReynolds et al. in 1955 [32]. They also per- formed annealing studies of irradiation hardened Cu, and found a sharp decrease of the critical shear stress at about 300 C. Unfortunately, no values are given, so one can not compare the values to those of unirra- diated Cu. Fig. 5. TEM micrographs of a CS Cu coating after heat-treatment of 1 h at 600 C. (a) Overview. There are no more nanosized grains, rather a recrystallized microstructure with micrometer-sized grains and recrystallization twins. Some have a coee-bean-like contrast, very much like in the as- sprayed coating, one of which is marked with a white arrow. (b) Close-up of a grain with coee-bean contrast. C. Borchers et al. / Acta Materialia 53 (2005) 29913000 2995 High-resolution studies of cold rolled coatings, see Fig. 7, revealed extrinsic and intrinsic dislocation loops, i.e., agglomerations of interstitials and vacancies. The loops have an estimated average diameter of about 3.5 nm, or about 200 agglomerated point defects per loop, which corresponds to a local point defect concen- tration of the order of 10 5 , keeping in mind that these loops are not found in every part of the examined coat- ings. These vacancies and interstitials must be formed during or immediately after the cold spray process. Two mechanisms of vacancy/interstitial formation are conceivable: 1. During cold spraying, there is a temperature rise to near the melting point at heating rates of about 10 9 K/s [20]. Thermal vacancies might emerge through the formation of Frenkel pairs. Under strain, the formation energy E F of Frenkel pairs in Cu decreases from 4.8 to about 2.2 eV [33]. So the follow- ing estimation gives the possible concentration c F of Frenkel pairs in quenched-up strained Cu: c F exp S F k
exp E F kT
10 9 ; where k is the Boltzmann constant, T = 1200 K the temperature, and S F the formation entropy S F = 2.5k of a Frenkel pair [34]. This value alone can- not account for the high density of dislocation loops observed in CS Cu. 2. The process of cold spraying is accompanied by heavy deformation of the powder particles at extre- mely high strain rates of around 10 9 /s reaching stres- ses up to 8 10 11 Pa [20]. This deformation is eectuated mainly by dislocations. These glide, climb, and intersect. The latter mechanism leads to jogged dislocations, the glide of which generates point defects, which dislocation climbing does as well. Hirth and Lothe [35] estimated a critical stress r crit above which the jogged dislocations can move with- out the aid of thermal uctuations: r crit
E F 2bla 2:5 10 8 Pa; Fig. 6. TEM micrographs of a coating that was cold rolled to 90% after annealing for 1 h at 600 C. (a) Overview. Here, the grain size is on the order of some 100 nm, and the dislocation density is again very high. Some grains, like the ones marked with arrows, exhibit a coee-bean-like contrast, very much like in the as-sprayed and the annealed coatings. (b) Close-up of a grain with coee-bean contrast. 2996 C. Borchers et al. / Acta Materialia 53 (2005) 29913000 where b = 2.5 10 10 m is the Burgers vector, l = 10 8 m the mean intersection length for the initial dislocation density of estimated 10 16 /m 2 , and a = 2.5 10 10 m a unit step width of a moving dislo- cation. E F 2.2 eV is taken as above. This value is at least two orders of magnitude below the peak stresses reached in the cold spray process, making the gener- ation of athermal point defects highly probable. Ko- vacs and Zsoldos [36] gave a possibility of estimating the concentration c P of point defects formed by these mechanisms: c P
1 2l Z s dc 3 10 2 ; where l = 42 GPa is the shear modulus of Cu [37], and R s dc 1=2s max c max with the maximum shear stress s max = 0.5 GPa and the maximum shear strain c max = 10 taken from Assadi et al. [20]. This estima- tion seems at rst glance to be very high, but on the one hand the formation of a high density of vacancies and interstitials after high strain-rate deformation is reported for copper [38], and on the other hand one can expect a large number of these point defects to Fig. 7. HRTEM images of two of the coee-bean-like contrasts in a cold sprayed copper coating which was annealed for 1 h at 600 C, and then cold rolled to 90%. The lattice spacing is Cu {111}: (a) intrinsic dislocation loop; (b) extrinsic dislocation loop. C. Borchers et al. / Acta Materialia 53 (2005) 29913000 2997 be annihilated even in the very short time disposable during or after the cold spray process. With both of the proposed mechanisms of point de- fect formation, most of the defects should recombine. However, if only 1% of these defects do not recombine but rather diuse and agglomerate, they most probably form extrinsic or intrinsic dislocation loops, as observed in the sprayed copper coatings. In CS Cu coatings, the presence of dislocation loops is always accompanied by the absence of straight dislocations. Since the feed- stock powder has a very high-dislocation density, the formation of these loops has to go back to the annihila- tion of straight dislocations, a process that seems to be related to some special combination of strain, type of strain, strain-rate and temperature rise in the material. Since these quantities are not known for a given region in a coating, and they are in particular highly non- uniform over the whole coating, any guess on this spe- cial combination would be quite speculative. Osetzky and co-workers [26] analysed the congura- tions of interstitials and their clusters by molecular dy- namic simulations. They report several dierent loop congurations with {111} and {110} habit planes, and Burgers vectors b = 1/3111, Frank loops, and b = 1/2110, the so-called perfect loops. Frank loops are sessile, while perfect loops are glissile. All are stable for a wide range of temperatures [26]. Perfect loops can dissociate on their glide prism to form extended loops, i.e., three-dimensional defects with sides composed of stacking faults. Furthermore, they nd that perfect loops with {111} habit planes rotate towards {110} during relaxation. According to continuum mechanics [36], dislocation loops of these types are stable, if their radius R is bigger than about 4a, where a is the lattice constant, which corresponds to 1.5 nm. Dislocation loops are persistent even after heat treatment [36], if their diameter exceeds a critical value. For copper, this value seems to be in the vicinity of 3 nm, since the small- est observed loops after heat treatment retain this size. Smaller loops tend to emit vacancies and vanish [36], hence the observed lower loop density in the annealed coatings. Puigvi and co-workers [29] studied the interac- tion between point defects and point defect clusters (loops) inter alia in copper by computer modelling. They found that vacancyself-interstitial recombination is inhibited, and hence the loops are stable. In addition, they found that single point defects can prevent cluster mobility, which has been conrmed by Hudson et al. [39]. The above considerations can explain the presence of dislocation loops in cold sprayed copper coatings after heat treatment, even though the exact nature of the loops is not elucidated in this work. Quite a lot of work has been done to nd out how dis- location loops behave during heavy deformation. Rod- ney and Martin [27] studied the interaction between moving dislocations and small (R<1 nm) interstitial Frank and perfect loops in Ni. They found that about one third of the loops are absorbed by dislocations, and most of the rest ip their Burgers vector to a direc- tion parallel to the glide plane of the dislocation. Rodney [31] found in a subsequent molecular dynamic study per- formed for Ni that Frank loops can be either unfaulted according to the reaction a=3111 a=6112 ! a=2110, or sheared and subsequently reconstructed. Yang and co-workers [28] found that Frank loops may or may not unfault during plastic deformation of Cu, while Wolfer et al. [30] report gliding and rotating perfect loops. All of these studies correspond well with the observation presented in this work that dislocation loops are persistent in CS Cu after cold rolling. After irradiation of Cu, periodic walls of defects, alternating with walls completely free of defects are ob- served [40]. The walls are aligned along {001}, i.e., elas- tically soft planes: they seem to minimize the total elastic energy of the elastically anisotropic system [40]. Robach and co-workers [41] studied the tensile deformation of irradiated Cu in situ in a TEM. They found that de- fect-free channels appeared only after deformation, but not under irradiation. Moreover, the observed channels were arranged along {111} planes, conrming observa- tions made by Diaz de la Rubia et al. [42] before. In the case of cold sprayed Cu coatings, no such channeling was observed, neither after spraying, nor after subse- quent annealing and cold rolling. One can assume that the high amount of shear stress in cold spraying as well as in cold rolling inhibits the formation of such defect- free walls. However, it must be pointed out that the microstructure of cold sprayed Cu coatings is highly non-uniform and some microstructural features like de- fect-free channels might have merely escaped our attention. The dierence in residual hardness between CS Cu coatings and cold rolled bulk Cu after annealing at 600 C is pronounced. The mechanical properties seem to be much more sensitive to dislocation loops than the electrical properties. This is easy to explain. The agglomeration of point defects reduces the electrical resistivity of metals as the main free path for electrons rises. In contrast, the yield strength and consequently the hardness of metals rises when point defects agglom- erate to larger faults, as is the case in precipitation hard- ening and dispersion hardening, since larger defects represent stronger obstacles to the motion of dislocations. 5. Conclusions The present work has shown that during cold spray- ing, a large number of intrinsic and extrinsic dislocation loops are formed. The generation of Frenkel pairs dur- 2998 C. Borchers et al. / Acta Materialia 53 (2005) 29913000 ing up-quenching of metals to satisfy the thermody- namic need for vacancies is conceivable; however, a numerical estimation of the generated number of Fren- kel pairs yields a density of only 10 9 . The most proba- ble formation mechanism for these loops is rather the agglomeration of point defects generated by dislocation climb during or immediately after deformation, leading to annihilation of the latter. This assumption is substan- tiated by the local absence of straight dislocations, whereas these do exist in great number where loops are absent. The observed dislocation loops are persistent after annealing up to 600 C and subsequent cold roll- ing, leading to a residual hardness almost twice as high as that of cold rolled and annealed bulk copper. The residual resistivity after annealing, when bulk copper is compared to CS copper, is only about 10% higher than the value for the bulk. 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