Recovery is a process by which deformed grains can reduce their stored energy by the removal or rearrangment of defects in their crystal structure. These defects, primarily dislocations, are introduced by plastic deformation of the material and act to increase the yield strength of a material. Since recovery reduces the dislocation density the process is normally accompanied by a reduction in a materials strength and a simultaneous increase in the ductility. As a result recovery may be considered benificial or detrimental depending on the circumstances. Recovery is related to the similar process of recrystallisation and grain growth. Recovery competes with recrystallisation, as both are driven by the stored energy, but is also thought to be a necessary prerequisite for the nucleation of recrystallised grains.
"The authors have agreed that ... recovery can be defined as all annealing processes occurring in deformed materials that occur without the migration of a high-angle grain boundary"Thus the process can be differentiated from recrystallisation and grain growth as both feature extensive movement of high-angle grain boundaries.
If recovery occurs during deformation (a situation that is common in high-temperature processing) then it is referred to as 'dynamic' while recovery that occurs after processing is termed 'static'. The princple difference is that during dynamic recovery stored energy continues to be introduced even as it is decreased by the recovery process - resulting in a form of dynamic equilibrium.
Sub-grain formation is followed by subgrain coarsening where the average size increases while the number of subgrains decreases. This reduces the total area of grain boundary and hence the stored energy in the material. Subgrain coarsen shares many features with grain growth.
If the sub-structure can be approximated to an array of spherical subgrains of radius R and boundary energy γs; the stored energy is uniform; and the force on the boundary is evenly distributed, the driving pressure P is given by:
Since γs is dependent on the boundary misorientation of the surrounding subgrains, the driving pressure generally does not remain constant throughout coarsening.
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It uses material from the
"Recovery (metallurgy)".
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