Abstract

Unprecedented phenomena were discovered by tempering the Ti-4Fe-7Al alloy quenched from the β (bcc) field. The alloy became very hard when it was tempered at 450℃ for several minutes, and severely rugged surface was generated. The inverse shape recovery phenomenon was also discovered when a quenched specimen that had been bent at room temperature was heated. The tempered microstructure showed almost β grains and some of the usual martensitic acicular structure areas. However, electron back scattering pattern (EBSP) measurements showed that the β-like grain was not the bcc structure but was the hcp or orthorhombic structure. X-ray diffraction (XRD) measurements clarified that an orthorhombic α″ structure (a=0.2995 nm, b=0.4913 nm, c=0.4659 nm) was formed from the β phase by tempering. Moreover, this α″ structure was confirmed to be a type of martensitic transformation because no concentration distribution was detected in scanning transmission electron microscopy-energy dispersive spectroscopy (STEM-EDS) analysis of the microstructure. It was suggested that the essential Ms point of the alloy should be higher than room temperature; however, the martensite transformation could not operate by fast quenching. The newly-discovered α″ martensite is formed without atomic diffusion by heating. When the β grain transforms into the single α″-variant, a very huge lattice strain is generated, resulting in the severely rugged surface or the inverse shape recovery phenomenon.

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