C.N. Athreya
Indian Institute of Technology Madras
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Featured researches published by C.N. Athreya.
Philosophical Magazine Letters | 2015
C.N. Athreya; Satyam Suwas; V. Subramanya Sarma
In the present work, the effect of deformation mode (uniaxial compression, rolling and torsion) on the microstructural heterogeneities in a commercial purity Ni is reported. For a given equivalent von Mises strain, samples subjected to torsion have shown higher fraction of high-angle boundaries, kernel average misorientation and recrystallization nuclei when compared to uniaxially compressed and rolled samples. This is attributed to the differences in the slip system activity under different modes of deformation.
Modelling and Simulation in Materials Science and Engineering | 2018
C.N. Athreya; A. Mukilventhan; Satyam Suwas; Srikanth Vedantam; V. Subramanya Sarma
The influence of the mode of deformation on recrystallisation behaviour of Ti was studied by experiments and modelling. Ti samples were deformed through torsion and rolling to the same equivalent strain of 0.5. The deformed samples were annealed at different temperatures for different time durations and the recrystallisation kinetics were compared. Recrystallisation is found to be faster in the rolled samples compared to the torsion deformed samples. This is attributed to the differences in stored energy and number of nuclei per unit area in the two modes of deformation. Considering decay in stored energy during recrystallisation, the grain boundary mobility was estimated through a mean field model. The activation energy for recrystallisation obtained from experiments matched with the activation energy for grain boundary migration obtained from mobility calculation. A multi-phase field model (with mobility estimated from the mean field model as a constitutive input) was used to simulate the kinetics, microstructure and texture evolution. The recrystallisation kinetics and grain size distributions obtained from experiments matched reasonably well with the phase field simulations. The recrystallisation texture predicted through phase field simulations compares well with experiments though few additional texture components are present in simulations. This is attributed to the anisotropy in grain boundary mobility, which is not accounted for in the present study.
Philosophical Magazine | 2017
C.N. Athreya; A. Mukilventhan; Satyam Suwas; Srikanth Vedantam; V. Subramanya Sarma
Abstract In this paper, we report the influence of the mode of deformation on recrystallisation kinetics through experiments, theory and a phase field model. Ni samples of 99.6% purity are subjected to torsion and rolling at two equivalent plastic strains and the recrystallisation kinetics and microstructure are compared experimentally. Due to significant differences in the distributions of the nuclei and stored energy for the same equivalent strain, large differences are observed in the recrystallisation kinetics of rolled and torsion-tested samples. Next, a multi-phase field model is developed in order to understand and predict the kinetics and microstructural evolution. The coarse-grained free energy parameters of the phase field model are taken to be a function of the stored energy. In order to account for the observed differences in recrystallisation kinetics, the phase field mobility parameter is a required constitutive input. The mobility is calculated by developing a mean field model of the recrystallisation process assuming that the strain free nuclei grow in a uniform stored energy field. The activation energy calculated from the mobilities obtained from the mean field calculation compares very well with the activation energy obtained from the kinetics of recrystallisation. The recrystallisation kinetics and microstructure as characterised by grain size distribution obtained from the phase field simulations match the experimental results to good accord. The novel combination of experiments, phase field simulations and mean field model facilitates a quantitative prediction of the microstructural evolution and kinetics.
Metallurgical and Materials Transactions A-physical Metallurgy and Materials Science | 2018
K.G. Raghavendra; Arup Dasgupta; C.N. Athreya; K. Jayasankar; S. Saroja; V. Subramanya Sarma
The current study examines the evolution of nanocrystallites of ZrO2 with time and temperature in a Fe-ZrO2 composite. The crystallite sizes were determined through X-ray peak broadening analysis by the Williamson–Hall method together with dark field transmission electron microscopy. The ZrO2 crystallites were found to be stable and retained their sizes at 973 K and 1073 K for hold durations up to 600 minutes. On the other hand, the crystallites were seen to grow at 1173 K and reached up to ~ 200 nm for a hold time of 600 minutes. The Ostwald ripening model was adopted to understand crystallite growth while a dislocation-driven pipe diffusion was adopted for understanding the kinetics of grain growth. The activation energy of grain growth was calculated as ~ 379 kJ mol−1. The modeled and experimentally calculated size evolutions with time and temperature were shown to be in good agreement with each other. A detailed discussion on the kinetics and activation energy of grain growth of ZrO2 crystallites in a Fe matrix is presented in this manuscript.
Materials Science and Engineering A-structural Materials Properties Microstructure and Processing | 2014
Dipti Samantaray; Sumantra Mandal; M. Jayalakshmi; C.N. Athreya; A.K. Bhaduri; V. Subramanya Sarma
Materials & Design | 2017
K. Arun Babu; Sumantra Mandal; C.N. Athreya; B. Shakthipriya; V. Subramanya Sarma
Materials Science and Engineering A-structural Materials Properties Microstructure and Processing | 2016
K. Arun Babu; Sumantra Mandal; Abhishek Kumar; C.N. Athreya; B. de Boer; V. Subramanya Sarma
Materials Science and Engineering A-structural Materials Properties Microstructure and Processing | 2017
S.K. Pradhan; Sumantra Mandal; C.N. Athreya; K. Arun Babu; B. de Boer; V. Subramanya Sarma
Corrosion Science | 2016
K Deepak; Sumantra Mandal; C.N. Athreya; Dong-Ik Kim; B. de Boer; V. Subramanya Sarma
Powder Technology | 2016
K.G. Raghavendra; Arup Dasgupta; Pragna Bhaskar; K. Jayasankar; C.N. Athreya; Padmalochan Panda; S. Saroja; V. Subramanya Sarma; R. Ramaseshan