In-situ Analysis of the Effect of Residual fcc Phase and Special Grain Boundaries on the Deformation Dynamics in Pure Cobalt
Michal Knapek, Peter Min\'arik, Adam Gre\v{s}, Patrik Dobro\v{n}, Petr, Harcuba, Tom\'a\v{s} Tayari, Franti\v{s}ek Chmel\'ik

TL;DR
This study investigates how residual fcc phase and special grain boundaries influence deformation behavior in pure cobalt, revealing their roles in enhancing deformability and structural integrity through combined in-situ and ex-situ analyses.
Contribution
It provides new insights into the effects of residual fcc phase and special grain boundaries on cobalt's deformation dynamics, highlighting their significance over grain size effects.
Findings
Residual fcc phase increases deformability and strength.
Special grain boundaries improve structural integrity.
Fcc→hcp transformation is sluggish and partial at high strains.
Abstract
Polycrystalline hcp metals - an important class of engineering materials - typically exhibit complex plasticity because of a limited number of slip systems. Among these metals, deformation is even more complicated in cobalt as it commonly contains residual fcc phase due to the incomplete martensitic fcchcp transformation upon cooling. In this work, we employ a combination of in-situ (acoustic emission, AE) and ex-situ (scanning electron microscopy, SEM) techniques in order to examine deformation dynamics in pure polycrystalline cobalt varying in grain size and the content of residual fcc phase prepared using systematic thermal treatment and cycling. We reveal that the presence of the fcc phase and special ~71{\deg} grain boundaries between different hcp martensite variants brings about higher deformability and strength. The fcc phase provides additional slip systems and…
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