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Tensile properties and deformation mechanisms of Re-0.1ZrO2 at room temperature and ultra high temperatures

  • Wenqing Ying
  • , Chenghao Yang
  • , Di Dong
  • , Fuge Chen
  • , Ning Xiong
  • , Tiejun Wang
  • , Chengyu Zhang

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

1 Scopus citations

Abstract

Tensile properties and deformation mechanisms of Re-0.1ZrO2 at room temperature and 1700–2000 °C were investigated. The microstructure and fracture morphology were observed by a scanning electron microscope, a focused ion beam-scanning electron microscope and a transmission electron microscope. The experimental results shows that both tensile strength and elongation of Re-0.1ZrO2 decrease at high temperatures compared to those at room temperature. At room temperature, the Re-0.1ZrO2 exhibits a mixed fracture mode of intergranular fracture and intragranular secondary plastic fracture. The deformation is accommodated by twinning and dislocation motion. Large number of {112¯1}<1¯1¯26 > tension twins nucleate and the activated primary dislocation slip system is pyramidal <c + a > dislocation slip. In the temperature range of 1700–2000 °C, the alloy is characteristics of intergranular fracture. The twinning is completely suppressed and the deformation of Re-0.1ZrO2 is dominated by movement of dislocations, whose main slip system remains pyramidal slip, with <a > type dislocation slip activated. Meanwhile, dislocation cross-slip and climb are also activated.

Original languageEnglish
Article number107505
JournalInternational Journal of Refractory Metals and Hard Materials
Volume134
DOIs
StatePublished - Jan 2026
Externally publishedYes

Keywords

  • Dislocation motion
  • Re-0.1ZrO
  • Tensile properties
  • Twinning
  • Ultra high temperature

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