A comparison of thermal stability in nanocrystalline Ni- and Co-based materials
Journal article, 2005

In this paper the microstructural development upon annealing of nanocrystalline Ni- and Co-based electrodeposits is described. New investigations on Ni, Ní–Fe, and Co–P are compared with previous results on Ni, Co, and Ni–P in terms of microstructural changes and stabilizing mechanisms. The conclusions are: pure nanocrystalline Ni and Co are stabilized by impurities in the grain boundaries. In the case of Co, also an allotropic phase transformation influences the occurrence of abnormal grain growth. Alloying and/or adding solutes is found to increase thermal stability. While in Ni-20 at.% Fe the ordering transformation is expected to be the reason for stabilization, in strongly segregating systems (Ni–P and Co–P) the stabilizing effect is the decrease in grain boundary energy due to solute segregation. After precipitation, Zener pinning still hinders grain boundary migration, but not sufficient to stabilize the nanocrystalline structure.

in-situ annealing

transmission electron microscopy

thermal stability

nanocrystalline materials

abnormal grain growth

Author

Melina da Silva

Chalmers, Materials and Manufacturing Technology, Surface and Microstructure Engineering

Uta Klement

Chalmers, Materials and Manufacturing Technology, Surface and Microstructure Engineering

Zeitschrift fur Metallkunde

Vol. 96 09 1009-1014

Subject Categories

Materials Engineering

More information

Created

10/8/2017