In situ Investigation of Plastic Deformation by Neutrons and Positrons—a Novel Approach

2004 
When characterizing residual stresses by neutron diffraction, neutron absorption is always a competing process. It leads to the emission of high-energy, so-called prompt gamma radiation, which in turn produces positrons within the bulk of the specimen. The decay of these antiparticles and the resulting annihilation radiation are influenced by material properties like defects. Plastic deformation and resulting increase of the dislocation density leads in the neutron scattering case to an increase in the mosaic spread of the BRAGG reflections, while on the other hand, the 511 keV line of the annihilation radiation is also measurably broadened. Suitable collimation can assure that the information gathered by neutron diffraction comes from about the same gauge volume as the information from positron annihilation. It is the aim of this project to investigate the correlation between the width of the BRAGG reflections and the S-parameter, by which the width of the annihilation line is described as a function of the degree of plastic deformation. In this way, more can be learned about a material, since during strain measurements by diffraction additional information is available through simultaneous gamma-ray spectroscopy.
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