Abstract

Polycrystalline and mosaic bicrystalline titanium films were subjected to steep heating/cooling rate of 1011∕108Ks−1 by laser pulsing. The induced phase transformations were followed by imaging and diffraction with a dynamic transmission electron microscope on the time scale of nanoseconds. On heating the film up to near the melting point with a 6-ns laser pulse, the low-temperature hcp phase transformed to the high-temperature bcc phase, with a nucleation rate of 1025m−3s−1 and a crystal-growth velocity of about 1000ms−1. Quenching of molten Ti first produced the bcc phase, which in turn transformed to the hcp phase within a few microseconds. Thus, hcp-bcc transformations occur in Ti, even at the above high thermal rates. They are martensitic and not diffusion limited as claimed for transformations at low thermal rates.

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