Incubation times and entropy barriers in martensitic kinetics: Monte Carlo quench simulations of strain pseudospins

Martensitic materials quenched from the austenite phase can show hugely different conversion kinetics: explosively rapid (“athermal”), or slowly incubated (“isothermal”). This traditional sharp distinction was queried by experiments finding conversion-incubation delay tails even in athermal martensi...

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Veröffentlicht in:Europhysics letters 2010-11, Vol.92 (3), p.36002
Hauptverfasser: Shankaraiah, N, Murthy, K. P. N, Lookman, T, Shenoy, S. R
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:Martensitic materials quenched from the austenite phase can show hugely different conversion kinetics: explosively rapid (“athermal”), or slowly incubated (“isothermal”). This traditional sharp distinction was queried by experiments finding conversion-incubation delay tails even in athermal martensites, at temperatures where only austenite should exist. To understand martensitic kinetics, we perform systematic Monte Carlo temperature-quench simulations of a protoypical martensitic model of S=0, ±1 strain pseudospins, with compatibility-induced, power law anisotropic interactions, and no extrinsic disorder. We find both athermal or isothermal behaviour in the same model, depending on parameters. In the athermal regime, the puzzling experimental temperature-time behaviour for conversions is reproduced: explosive conversions (below a spinodal), do indeed coexist with rising incubation-delay tails. A Vogel-Fulcher divergence at transition is predicted, in a region of tweed-like precursors. Incubations are explained as searches for rare, finite-scale transitional states, that are explicitly identified. Although complex textural changes occur during incubation, the energies are quite flat, in a signature of entropy barriers. The model suggests systematic quench experiments in martensites.
ISSN:0295-5075
1286-4854
DOI:10.1209/0295-5075/92/36002