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Super-Resolution Approaches in Three-Dimensions for Classification and Screening of Commercial-Off-The-Shelf Components

Polonsky, Andrew T.; Martinez, Carianne; Appleby, Catherine; Bernard, Sylvain R.; Griego, James G.; Noell, Philip; Pathare, Priya R.

X-ray computed tomography is generally a primary step in characterization of defective electronic components, but is generally too slow to screen large lots of components. Super-resolution imaging approaches, in which higher-resolution data is inferred from lower-resolution images, have the potential to substantially reduce collection times for data volumes accessible via x-ray computed tomography. Here we seek to advance existing two-dimensional super-resolution approaches directly to three-dimensional computed tomography data. Multiple scan resolutions over a half order of magnitude of resolution were collected for four classes of commercial electronic components to serve as training data for a deep-learning, super-resolution network. A modular python framework for three-dimensional super-resolution of computed tomography data has been developed and trained over multiple classes of electronic components. Initial training and testing demonstrate the vast promise for these approaches, which have the potential for more than an order of magnitude reduction in collection time for electronic component screening.

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Identifying the microstructural features associated with void nucleation during elevated-temperature deformation of copper

Fatigue and Fracture of Engineering Materials and Structures

Noell, Philip; Deka, Nipal; Sills, Ryan B.; Boyce, Brad L.

The microstructural-scale mechanisms that produce cracks in metals during deformation at elevated temperatures are relevant to applications that involve thermal exposure. Prior studies of cavitation during high-temperature deformation, for example, creep, suffered from an inability to directly observe the microstructural evolution that occurs during deformation and leads to void nucleation. The current study takes advantage of modern high-speed electron backscatter diffraction (EBSD) detectors to observe cavitation in oxygen-free, high-conductivity copper in situ during deformation at 300°C. Most voids formed at the triple junction between a twin boundary and a high-angle grain boundary (HAGB). This finding does not contradict previous studies that suggested that twins are resistant to cracking—it reveals that cracks in HAGBs originate at twin/HAGB triple junctions and that cracks preferentially grow along HAGBs rather than the accompanying twins. Atomistic simulations explored the origins of this observation and suggest that twin/HAGB triple junctions are microstructural weak points.

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Measuring the Residual Stress and Stress Corrosion Cracking Susceptibility of Additively Manufactured 316L by ASTM G36-94

Corrosion

Karasz, Erin K.; Taylor, Jason M.; Autenrieth, David; Reu, P.L.; Johnson, Kyle L.; Melia, Michael A.; Noell, Philip

Residual stress is a contributor to stress corrosion cracking (SCC) and a common byproduct of additive manufacturing (AM). Here the relationship between residual stress and SCC susceptibility in laser powder bed fusion AM 316L stainless steel was studied through immersion in saturated boiling magnesium chloride per ASTM G36-94. The residual stress was varied by changing the sample height for the as-built condition and additionally by heat treatments at 600°C, 800°C, and 1,200°C to control, and in some cases reduce, residual stress. In general, all samples in the as-built condition showed susceptibility to SCC with the thinner, lower residual stress samples showing shallower cracks and crack propagation occurring perpendicular to melt tracks due to local residual stress fields. The heat-treated samples showed a reduction in residual stress for the 800°C and 1,200°C samples. Both were free of cracks after >300 h of immersion in MgCl2, while the 600°C sample showed similar cracking to their as-built counterpart. Geometrically necessary dislocation (GND) density analysis indicates that the dislocation density may play a major role in the SCC susceptibility.

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Long-Term Effects of Humidity on Stainless Steel Pitting in Sea Salt Exposures

Journal of the Electrochemical Society

Srinivasan, J.; Weirich, T.D.; Marino, G.A.; Annerino, A.R.; Taylor, Jason M.; Noell, Philip; Griego, James G.; Schaller, Rebecca S.; Bryan, C.R.; Locke, J.S.; Schindelholz, E.J.

Ground 304 stainless steel (SS) samples were exposed to sea salt particles at 35 °C and two relative humidity (RH) levels for durations ranging from 1 week to 2 years. For all exposure times, pit number density and total pit volume at 40% RH were observed to be considerably greater than those at 76% RH. Statistical analysis of distributions of pit populations for both RH conditions showed that pit number density and total pit volume increased rapidly at first but slowed as exposure time increased. Cross-hatched features were observed in the 40% RH pits while ellipsoidal, faceted pits were observed at 76% RH. Optical profilometry indicated that most pits were not hemispherical. X-ray tomography provided evidence of undercutting and fissures. Piecewise curve fitting modeled the 40% RH data closely, predicting that corrosion damage would eventually plateau. However, a similar treatment of the 76% RH data suggested that corrosion damage would continuously increase, which implied that the piecewise power-law fit was limited in its ability to model atmospheric corrosion generally. Based on these observations, the operative mechanisms determining long-term corrosion behavior were hypothesized to be different depending on the RH of exposure.

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Nonlinear ultrasonic technique for the characterization of microstructure in additive materials

Journal of the Acoustical Society of America

Bellotti, Aurelio; Kim, Jin Y.; Bishop, Joseph E.; Jared, Bradley H.; Johnson, Kyle L.; Susan, Donald F.; Noell, Philip; Jacobs, Laurence J.

This study employs nonlinear ultrasonic techniques to track microstructural changes in additively manufactured metals. The second harmonic generation technique based on the transmission of Rayleigh surface waves is used to measure the acoustic nonlinearity parameter, β. Stainless steel specimens are made through three procedures: traditional wrought manufacturing, laser-powder bed fusion, and laser engineered net shaping. The β parameter is measured through successive steps of an annealing heat treatment intended to decrease dislocation density. Dislocation density is known to be sensitive to manufacturing variables. In agreement with fundamental material models for the dislocation-acoustic nonlinearity relationship in the second harmonic generation, β drops in each specimen throughout the heat treatment before recrystallization. Geometrically necessary dislocations (GNDs) are measured from electron back-scatter diffraction as a quantitative indicator of dislocations; average GND density and β are found to have a statistical correlation coefficient of 0.852 showing the sensitivity of β to dislocations in additively manufactured metals. Moreover, β shows an excellent correlation with hardness, which is a measure of the macroscopic effect of dislocations.

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Results 26–50 of 87
Results 26–50 of 87