Polychromatic X-ray microdiffraction studies of mesoscale structure and dynamics

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Abstract

Polychromatic X-ray microdiffraction is an emerging tool for studying mesoscale structure and dynamics. Crystalline phase, orientation (texture), elastic and plastic strain can be nondestructively mapped in three dimensions with good spatial and angular resolution. Local crystallographic orientation can be determined to 0.01° and elastic strain tensor elements can be measured with a resolution of ∼ 10 ∼-4 or better. Complete strain tensor information can be obtained by augmenting polychromatic microdiffraction with a monochromatic measurement of one Laue-reflection energy. With differential-aperture depth profiling, volumes tens to hundreds of micrometers below the surface are accessible so that three-dimensional distributions of crystalline morphology including grain boundaries, triple points, second phases and inclusions can all be mapped. Volume elements below 0.25 μm3 are routinely resolved so that the grain boundary structure of most materials can be characterized. Here the theory, instrumentation and application of polychromatic microdiffraction are described. © 2005 International Union of Crystallography Printed in Great Britain - all rights reserved.

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Ice, G. E., Larson, B. C., Yang, W., Budai, J. D., Tischler, J. Z., Pang, J. W. L., … Liu, W. (2005). Polychromatic X-ray microdiffraction studies of mesoscale structure and dynamics. In Journal of Synchrotron Radiation (Vol. 12, pp. 155–162). https://doi.org/10.1107/S0909049504026949

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