Abstract

Mechanisms of plastic deformation of a high-temperature B2 phase that act upon tension, compression, and high-pressure torsion in TiNi-based single crystals have been studied depending on the crystal orientation. For the crystals with orientations located near the [ $$ \bar 1 $$ 11] and [ $$ \bar 1 $$ 12] poles in the standard stereographic triangle, multiple dislocation slip prevails upon both compression and tension. In “hard” crystals with the deformation axis close to the [001] direction, in which the Schmid factors for dislocation slip are close to zero, the main deformation mechanisms are the mechanical twinning in the B2 phase and the stress-assisted B2 → B19′ martensitic transformation. All the above listed mechanisms take part in the formation of the {111}〈hkl〉 texture. The mechanism of the change in the orientation of “hard” polycrystalline grains upon the formation of a nanocrystalline and amorphous-crystalline state has been demonstrated on the example of the evolution of the structure of [001] crystals upon severe plastic deformation in a Bridgman cell.

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