Publication | Open Access
High-Pressure—High-Temperature Polymorphism in Ta: Resolving an Ongoing Experimental Controversy
104
Citations
28
References
2010
Year
Phase DiagramsSolid PhaseEngineeringHigh-pressure—high-temperature PolymorphismRefractory MetalsThermophysicsThermodynamicsThermomechanical AnalysisMaterials SciencePhysicsHot WorkingSolid MechanicsMicrostructureHigh Temperature MaterialsPhase EquilibriumCryogenicsApplied PhysicsAlloy PhaseMetallurgical SystemMechanics Of Materials
Phase diagrams of refractory metals remain essentially unknown. Moreover, there is an ongoing controversy over the high-pressure melting temperatures of these metals: results of diamond anvil cell (DAC) and shock wave experiments differ by at least a factor of 2. From an extensive ab initio study on tantalum we discovered that the body-centered cubic phase, its physical phase at ambient conditions, transforms to another solid phase, possibly hexagonal omega phase, at high temperature. Hence the sample motion observed in DAC experiments is very likely not due to melting but internal stresses accompanying a solid-solid transformation, and thermal stresses associated with laser heating.
| Year | Citations | |
|---|---|---|
Page 1
Page 1