Abstract

Recovery, recrystallization and grain growth are among the most important metallurgical heat treatment processes to soften cold worked metals and design desired microstructures and textures. Specifically the reduction in grain size can be efficiently achieved by recrystallization. While plastic cold working increases the stored energy of metals, mainly through dislocation accumulation, recovery and specifically recrystallization lead to it reduction. While recovery describes the gradual re-ordering and annihilation of the stored dislocations, primary recrystallization proceeds discontinuously by the formation and motion of high angle grain boundaries which discontinuously sweep the deformation substructure. Grain growth describes the process of competitive capillary driven coarsening of the average grain size. This chapter reviews the main mechanisms, lattice defects, and driving forces associated with recovery, recrystallization and grain growth and provides an introduction to the simulation of these phenomena.

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