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首页> 外文期刊>The Cryosphere >Temperature and strain controls on ice deformation mechanisms: insights from the microstructures of samples deformed to progressively higher strains at ?10, ?20 and ?30 °C
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Temperature and strain controls on ice deformation mechanisms: insights from the microstructures of samples deformed to progressively higher strains at ?10, ?20 and ?30 °C

机译:冰变形机制上的温度和应变控制:样品微观结构的见解使其变形为逐渐更高的菌株在α0,Δ20和?30°C

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摘要

In order to better understand ice deformation mechanisms, we document the microstructural evolution of ice with increasing strain. We include data from experiments at relatively low temperatures (?20 and ?30 °C), where the microstructural evolution with axial strain has never before been documented. Polycrystalline pure water ice was deformed under a constant displacement rate (strain rate ~1.0×10-5 s?1) to progressively higher strains (~ 3 %, 5 %, 8 %, 12 % and 20 %) at temperatures of ?10, ?20 and ?30 °C. Microstructural data were generated from cryogenic electron backscattered diffraction (cryo-EBSD) analyses. All deformed samples contain subgrain (low-angle misorientations) structures with misorientation axes that lie dominantly in the basal plane, suggesting the activity of dislocation creep (glide primarily on the basal plane), recovery and subgrain rotation. Grain boundaries are lobate in all experiments, suggesting the operation of strain-induced grain boundary migration (GBM). Deformed ice samples are characterized by interlocking big and small grains and are, on average, finer grained than undeformed samples. Misorientation analyses between nearby grains in 2-D EBSD maps are consistent with some 2-D grains being different limbs of the same irregular grain in the 3-D volume. The proportion of repeated (i.e. interconnected) grains is greater in the higher-temperature experiments suggesting that grains have more irregular shapes, probably because GBM is more widespread at higher temperatures. The number of grains per unit area (accounting for multiple occurrences of the same 3-D grain) is higher in deformed samples than undeformed samples, and it increases with strain, suggesting that nucleation is involved in recrystallization. “Core-and-mantle” structures (rings of small grains surrounding big grains) occur in ?20 and ?30 °C experiments, suggesting that subgrain rotation recrystallization is active. At temperatures warmer than ?20 °C, c?axes develop a crystallographic preferred orientation (CPO) characterized by a cone (i.e. small circle) around the compression axis. We suggest the c-axis cone forms via the selective growth of grains in easy slip orientations (i.e. ~ 45° to shortening direction) by GBM. The opening angle of the c-axis cone decreases with strain, suggesting strain-induced GBM is balanced by grain rotation. Furthermore, the opening angle of the c-axis cone decreases with temperature. At ?30 °C, the c-axis CPO changes from a narrow cone to a cluster, parallel to compression, with increasing strain. This closure of the c-axis cone is interpreted as the result of a more active grain rotation together with a less effective GBM. We suggest that lattice rotation, facilitated by intracrystalline dislocation glide on the basal plane, is the dominant mechanism controlling grain rotation. Low-angle neighbour-pair misorientations, relating to subgrain boundaries, are more extensive and extend to higher misorientation angles at lower temperatures and higher strains supporting a relative increase in the importance of dislocation activity. As the temperature decreases, the overall CPO intensity decreases, primarily because the CPO of small grains is weaker. High-angle grain boundaries between small grains have misorientation axes that have distributed crystallographic orientations. This implies that, in contrast to subgrain boundaries, grain boundary misorientation is not controlled by crystallography. Nucleation during recrystallization cannot be explained by subgrain rotation recrystallization alone. Grain boundary sliding of finer grains or a different nucleation mechanism that generates grains with random orientations could explain the weaker CPO of the fine-grained fraction and the lack of crystallographic control on high-angle grain boundaries.
机译:为了更好地理解冰变形机制,我们记录了随着菌株的增加的冰的微观结构演变。我们将来自较低温度(Δ20和30°C)的实验的数据包括在其中,在记录之前,从未记录过轴向菌株的微观结构演化。在恒定的位移率(应变率〜1.0×10-5秒S 1)下,多晶纯水冰变形,在Δ10的温度下逐渐更高的菌株(〜3%,5%,8%,12%和20%) ,?20和?30°C。从低温电子背散射衍射(Cryo-EBSD)分析中产生微观结构数据。所有变形样品都含有子粒(低角度错误)结构,其具有错误的轴,这些轴在基础平面上呈现,表明位错蠕变(主要在基础平面上滑动),恢复和粒度旋转。在所有实验中,晶界是裂解的,表明应变诱导的晶粒边界迁移(GBM)的操作。变形的冰上样品的特征在于互锁大小粒子,平均而言,比未变形样品更精细地粒化。附近的2-D EBSD地图中的附近谷物之间的错误化分析与3-D体积中相同不规则晶粒的不同肢体一致。在高温实验中,重复(即互连的)颗粒的比例较高,表明晶粒具有更不规则的形状,可能是因为GBM在较高温度下更广泛。每单位面积的晶粒的数量(同一3-D晶粒的多次出现)比未变形样品的变形样品更高,并且随着菌株增加,表明成核参与重结晶。 “核心和地幔”结构(围绕着大颗粒的小颗粒的环)发生在?20和?30°C实验中,表明粒子旋转重结晶是活性的。温度比20°C温暖,C?轴显现出一种围绕压缩轴线的锥体(即小圆圈)的晶形优选取向(CPO)。我们建议C轴锥体通过GBM轻松滑移取向(即45°至缩短方向)的晶粒的选择性生长来形成。 C轴锥体的开口角度用菌株减少,表明应变诱导的GBM通过晶粒旋转平衡。此外,C轴锥体的开口角度随温度降低。在?30°C时,C轴CPO从窄锥形变为簇,平行于压缩,随着应变的增加。 C轴锥体的这种闭合被解释为更具活跃的晶粒旋转以及较低的GBM的结果。我们建议通过基底平面上的龟氏脱位滑动促进的晶格旋转,是控制晶粒旋转的主要机理。与粒子边界有关的低角度邻近的错位性更广泛,并且在较低温度下延伸到较高的无主管角度,较高的菌株支持位错活动的重要性的相对增加。随着温度降低,总体CPO强度降低,主要是因为小晶粒的CPO较弱。小晶粒之间的高角度晶界具有具有分布式晶体取向的错误化轴。这意味着与子底界相反,晶界错误化不受晶体学控制。单独的子旋转再结晶不能解释重结晶期间的成核。细粒晶粒或不同成核机制的晶界滑动,产生随机取向的晶粒可以解释细粒粒径的较弱CPO和高角度晶界对缺乏晶体控制。

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