Recrystallization ( metallurgy )

  • Thread starter Thread starter jamesabc
  • Start date Start date
  • Tags Tags
    Metallurgy
AI Thread Summary
Recrystallization is a metallurgical process where deformed grains are replaced by new, undeformed grains that nucleate and grow, ultimately consuming the original grains. This process involves the movement and reorientation of atoms and molecules, leading to the formation of new crystals with fewer defects. Grain boundaries, which have higher energy due to mismatched orientations, facilitate the transition from smaller to larger grains as dislocation networks coalesce. While recrystallization can affect the texture of polycrystalline materials, the predominant focus is on the creation of regular atomic arrangements. Understanding this process is essential for grasping the changes in material properties following deformation.
jamesabc
Messages
22
Reaction score
0
i read up recrystallization on wikipedia and it said

"Recrystallization is a process by which deformed grains are replaced by a new set of undeformed grains that nucleate and grow until the original grains have been entirely consumed."

so is recrystallization where the molecules and atoms change their orientation and shape? is that the same as what is stated above?
 
Engineering news on Phys.org
The grain boundaries have more energy because of the local mismatch in crystal/lattice orientation. Usually the grain boundaries sweep through the smaller grains, which produces larger grains.

In material that has been worked, there are dislocation networks, and these networks can coalesce and produce (nucleate) new grain boundaries, and the smaller grains can 'disappear' into the larger grains.

In a polycrystalline material, adjacent grains have different lattice orientations. Recrystallization does affect texture (predominant grain orientation) but it is not necessarily significant.
 
Not quite. The key idea is that new crystals (regular arrangements of atoms with few defects) form and grow, replacing the old crystals that are deformed and filled with defects. The process does involve the movement of atoms and molecules. Imagine restacking a pile of rigid spheres that has become shifted and disorganized.

EDIT: My "not quite" was in response to the first post.
 
so during recrystallization crystals actually do not move as such but do change shape by growing smaller and or larger? also by grains and crystals you mean a group of molecules that gather together to make up a larger body.

im still trying to learn about this new topic. thanks
 
Back
Top