Abstract:
The displacive phase transformation in an appoximately equiatomic Ti-Ni alloy and Fe-Ni-V-C alloy has been studied by TEM. The results show that the stress has strong effects on the lattice instability. A tensile stress promotes soft modes which relate to the nucleation of the
R-phase and the Martensite phase. It has been identified that the diffuse streaks in the electron diffraction arise from the softening of phonons which <111>olarization vectors which results from the softening of
Coff<111>. The
R-phase nucleus formed on the plate of Ti
11Ni
14 where a tensile stress field was good to
R-transfor-mation. The regular shape of the R-phase is the comprehensive effect of strain energy and interface energy. The special dislocation constitution has been observed in Fe-Ni-V-C alloy. An array of shorter dislocation which
b =1/2 0
11fcc piled up within long envelope dislocation with
b = 1/2
110
fcc. It provide necessary atomic displacement (in double-shear) and can transform into butterfly martensite.