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single crystal and poly crystal metal |
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| Apr3-09, 09:11 PM | #1 |
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single crystal and poly crystal metal
What difference would you observe about the yield stress, young modulus,etc if your material were a single crystal? Explain the difference.
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| Apr4-09, 06:38 AM | #2 |
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Please show your own work first. Also, it looks like this and your other questions would be a better fit in the homework forum.
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| Apr4-09, 06:40 AM | #3 |
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my ans is:If the material were a single crystal, the yield stress would be lower. The dislocation could move easily because there is only 1 crystal. In addition, single crystal metals have directional stiffness. But I'm not sure about that
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| Apr4-09, 06:52 AM | #4 |
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single crystal and poly crystal metal
Sounds good. To fill this in further, I'd mention the relative difference between the yield stress and Young's modulus for the two types of samples (i.e., is [itex]\sigma_y[/itex] half as much for a single crystal? A thousandth as much? Similarly, does the Young's modulus in different directions vary by a factor of two? A factor of a thousand?).
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| Apr4-09, 06:55 AM | #5 |
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Thax, I'll think about it
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| May11-10, 08:55 AM | #6 |
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I came to this forum to learn more about single crystal casting/properties/etc. Sooooo, instead of starting a new thread I will just continue this one.
Can single crystal structures be heat treated to different phases? If they have dislocations, this implies that they can be forged/annealed/work hardened/etc, no? How would the UTS and modulus in the preferred (maximum value) direction compare to a polycrystalline sample of the same dimensions? I know cost is a big prohibitor, but why have we not seen single crystal casting methods used to create parts in applications like MotoGP, F1, and others? It seems that their only purpose is to make fan blades and computer chips. |
| May18-10, 01:38 PM | #7 |
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Any help here? Seems like I couldn't find anything on my own for a reason....
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| May18-10, 01:59 PM | #8 |
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The advantage of single crystals (in mechanics) is that grain boundary creep is removed as a creep mechanism. If grain boundary creep isn't the dominant cause of failure, then nobody's going to spend money to grow a single metal crystal part.
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| May18-10, 07:45 PM | #9 |
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