How do microvoids in a metal sample affect its strength?

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Discussion Overview

The discussion revolves around the impact of microvoids in a metal sample on its strength, particularly in the context of results from a Charpy impact test. Participants explore the relationship between microvoids, ductility, and brittleness of materials at different temperatures.

Discussion Character

  • Exploratory
  • Technical explanation
  • Conceptual clarification

Main Points Raised

  • One participant questions how microvoids in a room temperature sample contribute to higher strength and energy absorption compared to a sample cooled in liquid nitrogen.
  • Another participant clarifies that the ductile sample at room temperature separates grains through boundaries, while the brittle sample breaks through the crystals when cooled.
  • A further contribution discusses the role of atomic movement during fracture, suggesting that ductile materials allow significant atom movement, which absorbs energy, whereas brittle materials do not permit such movement, leading to fracture propagation through grains.
  • Microvoids are described as structures that form during the fracture process, representing atomic movement and energy absorption during fracture.

Areas of Agreement / Disagreement

Participants express differing views on the mechanisms by which microvoids affect material strength, with some emphasizing atomic movement and others focusing on grain boundary interactions. The discussion remains unresolved regarding the precise role of microvoids in energy absorption and fracture behavior.

Contextual Notes

Participants reference the temperature dependence of material properties and the implications for ductility and brittleness, but the discussion does not clarify specific assumptions or definitions related to microvoids and their formation.

member 392791
Hello,

I have two images taken of a metal sample that were snapped by a charpy impact test. The image with the black dots (microvoids) was the sample at room temperature, and the flat one was the sample that had been dipped in liquid nitrogen just before impact.

My question is, what role do the microvoids in the room temperature sample correspond to a higher strength of the material, since it was able to absorb more energy to snap compared to the other sample.

I know it must be something to do with the brittleness of the material, but I'm not too keen on what the microvoids are doing on the microscale that causes absorption of more energy.

Thank you
 
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No images provided.
 
The ductile image is the one at room temperature, and the brittle is the one that was in liquid nitrogen
 

Attachments

  • Charpy Ductile impact test - SEM-1.jpg
    Charpy Ductile impact test - SEM-1.jpg
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  • Charpy Brittle impact test - SEM.jpg
    Charpy Brittle impact test - SEM.jpg
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Cooling down makes the material so fragile that it breaks through the crystals, while at room temperature you separate the grains through the boundaries between them.
 
Brittleness or ductility can really be interpreted by atom movement during fracture. Ductile materials have significant atom movement during facture, while brittle materials do not.
Moving atoms takes energy. at room temperature, there is still enough energy for atoms to diffuse - overcome the energy barrier associated with adjacent bonding atoms. in brittle fracture, there is not enough energy (kT) for the atoms to diffuse, so fractures propagate regardless of grain boundaries, and fractures can propagate through grains (the strongest part).
microvoids are structures that form during the fracture process that represent atomic movement - diffusion - and thus energy absorbed during fracturecheck out http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Microvoid_coalescence
 

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