Author:
Park E. T.,Nash P.,Wolfenstine J.,Goretta K. C.,Routbort J. L.
Abstract
Compressive creep of dense BaTiO3 having linear-intercept grain sizes of 19.3–52.4 μm was investigated at 1200–1300 °C by varying the oxygen partial pressure from 102 to 105 Pa in both constant-stress and constant-crosshead-velocity modes. Microstructures of the deformed materials were examined by scanning and transmission electron microscopy. The stress exponent was ≈1, the grain-size dependence was ≈1/d2, and the activation energy was ≈720 kJ/mole. These parameters, combined with the microstructural observations (particularly grain displacement and absence of deformation-induced dislocations), indicated that the dominant deformation mechanism was grain-boundary sliding accommodated by lattice cation diffusion. Because of the absence of an oxygen partial pressure dependence, diffusion was probably controlled extrinsically.
Publisher
Springer Science and Business Media LLC
Subject
Mechanical Engineering,Mechanics of Materials,Condensed Matter Physics,General Materials Science
Cited by
28 articles.
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