Hostname: page-component-76fb5796d-wq484 Total loading time: 0 Render date: 2024-04-30T03:21:38.686Z Has data issue: false hasContentIssue false

Burst Martensitic Transformations in a Pu-Ga Alloy

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  26 February 2011

Kerri J.M. Blobaum
Affiliation:
blobaum1@llnl.gov, Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory, Chemistry and Materials Science, L-356, 7000 East Avenue, Livermore, CA, 94550, United States, (925) 422-3289, (925) 424-4737
J. N. Mitchell
Affiliation:
jeremy@lanl.gov, Los Alamos National Laboratory, Nuclear Materials Division, United States
C. R. Krenn
Affiliation:
krenn1@llnl.gov, Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory, United States
M. A. Wall
Affiliation:
wall1@llnl.gov, Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory, Chemistry and Materials Science Directorate, United States
T. B. Massalski
Affiliation:
massalsk@andrew.cmu.edu, Carnegie Mellon University, Department of Material Science and Engineering, United States
A. J. Schwartz
Affiliation:
schwartz6@llnl.gov, Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory, Physics and Advanced Technologies Directorate, United States
Get access

Abstract

Martensitic transformations can occur via two modes: thermoelastic and burst. In thermoelastic martensites, deformation can be accommodated elastically and transformations occur smoothly with changes in temperature or stress. Burst martensitic transformations require both elastic and plastic deformation to accommodate strain; individual martensite particles form at the speed of sound, and the overall accumulation of martensite may increase in discrete, incremental steps. Here, we examine a unique martensitic transformation and reversion in a Pu-2.0 at% Ga alloy and show evidence that they proceed via the burst mode. Upon cooling from ambient conditions, the metastable delta phase partially transforms martensitically to the alpha-prime phase with a volume contraction of 20%. This large volume change suggests a burst transformation. Furthermore, using differential scanning calorimetry (DSC), we observed that the alpha-prime to delta reversion proceeds in discrete increments, which appear as sharp peaks in DSC data. The DSC data is compared to similar results obtained using dilatometry and resistometry. This incremental progression is believed to be the result of autocatalytic cascades of many alpha-prime particles reverting nearly-simultaneously to the delta phase. Finite-element modeling suggests that residual stresses in the regions of reverted alpha-prime particles may catalyze (or retard) additional transformation. These stresses could initiate cascades of alpha-prime particles that revert nearly-simultaneously. The cascades are likely quenched by stress and/or temperature changes resulting from the transformation itself. During the forward delta to alpha-prime transformation, burst events are not observed with the above techniques. The transformation, however, is still expected to proceed via the burst martensite mode because of the large volume changes required. Because alpha-prime must be nucleated in the delta matrix before it can grow as an individual burst, the transformation may not occur cooperatively. These individual bursts may be too small to be resolved by the above techniques, and the signal observed corresponds to a cumulative total of all the events.

Type
Research Article
Copyright
Copyright © Materials Research Society 2006

Access options

Get access to the full version of this content by using one of the access options below. (Log in options will check for institutional or personal access. Content may require purchase if you do not have access.)

References

REFERENCES

1. Heiple, C. R. and Carpenter, S. H., Metall. Trans. A 23A, 779783 (1992).Google Scholar
2. Hecker, S. S., Los Alamos Science 26, 290335 (2000).Google Scholar
3. Hecker, S. S., Harbur, D. R., and Zocco, T. G., Prog. Mater. Sci. 49, 429485 (2004).Google Scholar
4. Chebotarev, N. T., Smotriskaya, E. S., Andrianov, M. A., and Kostyuk, O. E., in Plutonium 1975 and Other Actinides, edited by Blank, H. and Lindner, R., (Amsterdam, 1975), pp. 3746.Google Scholar
5. Hecker, S. S. and Timofeeva, L. F., Los Alamos Science 26, 244251 (2000).Google Scholar
6. Blobaum, K. J. M., Krenn, C. R., Haslam, J. J., Wall, M. A., and Schwartz, A. J., in Actinides–Basic Science, Applications, and Technology, edited by Soderholm, L., Joyce, J. J., Nicol, M. F., Shuh, D. K., and Tobin, J. G., (Mater. Res. Soc. Symp. Proc. 802, Pittsburgh, PA, 2003), pp. 3338.Google Scholar
7. Blobaum, K. J. M., Krenn, C. R., Mitchell, J. N., Haslam, J. J., Wall, M. A., Massalski, T. B., and Schwartz, A. J., Metall. Mater. Trans. A (accepted, 2005).Google Scholar
8. Mitchell, J. N., Stan, M., Schwartz, D. S., and Boehlert, C. J., Metall. Mater. Trans. A 35A, 22672278 (2004).Google Scholar
9. Krenn, C. R., Wall, M. A., and Schwartz, A. J., in Actinides–Basic Science, Applications, and Technology, edited by Soderholm, L., Joyce, J. J., Nicol, M. F., Shuh, D. K., and Tobin, J. G., (Mater. Res. Soc. Symp. Proc. 802, Pittsburgh, PA, 2003), pp. 914.Google Scholar