RESUMO
A new high-temperature detector dedicated to the collection of backscattered electrons is used in combination with heating stages up to 1050°C, in high-vacuum and low-vacuum modes in order to evaluate its possibilities through signal-to-noise ration measurements and different applications. Four examples of material transformations occurring at high temperature are herein reported: grain growth during annealing of a rolled platinum foil, recrystallisation of a multiphased alloy, oxidation of a Ni-based alloy and complex phase transformations occurring during the annealing of an Al-Si coated boron steel. The detector could be potentially adapted to any type of SEM and it offers good opportunities to perform high-temperature experiments in various atmospheres.
RESUMO
Lead-calcium alloys are commonly used for their high mechanical properties, compared with pure lead. These alloys evolve quickly at room temperature and could in a few months, or years, undergo a softening (overageing). During the last decade, much research has been carried out on the subject without any unanimous results, due mainly to the diversity of the alloy's transformations and the difficulties of observation (wide range of kinetics, heterogeneity of transformations, etc.). The use of several in situ techniques developed specifically for lead alloys in our laboratories has enabled us to identify five transformations in lead-calcium alloys. The structural hardening begins by two discontinuous transformations. The first one is complete and the second one of ordering type remains incomplete. The end of the hardening is due to a thin precipitation of Pb(3)Ca, which is followed by a coarsening (softening) of macroprecipitates aligned in strings. The last softening stage comes with the formation of lamellar Pb(3)Ca precipitates by coalescence of the macroprecipitates.