Abstract

Magnesium bicrystals were grown with symmetric and asymmetric tilt boundaries about the [10–10] axis using the vertical Bridgman technique. Isothermal constant load tensile tests were conducted on these bicrystals in the temperature range 300–500°C and relative displacements of the two grains were measured to obtain an appreciation for grain boundary motion characteristics. Coupled grain boundary motion was noted in almost all cases with the degree of tangential motion versus migration changing with tilt misorientation, temperature and applied stress. Specifically, within the family of symmetric bicrystals evaluated, a minimum in grain boundary displacement in the specimen plane was observed at a tilt misorientation of 20°. In specific stress/temperature regimes, rigid body sliding was observed for the particular case of a 35° asymmetric tilt misorientation. The ease of basal and prism slip in magnesium at the temperatures considered and the consequential impingement of intragranular dislocations on the bicrystal boundary and their decomposition and motion along the boundary are thought to play an important role in the observed coupled motion of these tilt boundaries.

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