Visualizing the heterogeneous breakdown of a fractal microstructure during compaction by neutron dark-field imaging
R.P. Harti (Paul Scherrer Institut)
J. Valsecchi (Paul Scherrer Institut)
P. Trtik (Paul Scherrer Institut)
D. Mannes (Paul Scherrer Institut)
C. Carminati (Paul Scherrer Institut)
Markus Strobl (Niels Bohr Institute, Copenhagen, Paul Scherrer Institut)
Jeroen Plomp (TU Delft - RST/Neutron and Positron Methods in Materials)
Chris Duif (TU Delft - RST/Neutron and Positron Methods in Materials)
Christian Grünzweig (Paul Scherrer Institut)
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Abstract
Structural properties of cohesive powders are dominated by their microstructural composition. Powders with a fractal microstructure show particularly interesting properties during compaction where a microstructural transition and a fractal breakdown happen before compaction and force transport. The study of this phenomenon has been challenging due to its long-range effect and the subsequent necessity to characterize these microstructural changes on a macroscopic scale. For the detailed investigation of the complex nature of powder compaction for various densification states along with the heterogeneous breakdown of the fractal microstructure we applied neutron dark-field imaging in combination with a variety of supporting techniques with various spatial resolutions, field-of-views and information depths. We used scanning electron microscopy to image the surface microstructure in a small field-of-view and X-ray tomography to image density variations in 3D with lower spatial resolution. Non-local spin-echo small-angle neutron scattering results are used to evaluate fitting models later used as input parameters for the neutron dark-field imaging data analysis. Finally, neutron dark-field imaging results in combination with supporting measurements using scanning electron microscopy, X-ray tomography and spin-echo small angle scattering allowed us to comprehensively study the heterogeneous transition from a fractal to a homogeneous microstructure of a cohesive powder in a quantitative manner.