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Electron Backscatter Diffraction in Materials Science by Adam J. Schwartz β€” book cover

Electron Backscatter Diffraction in Materials Science

by Schwartz, Adam J., Kumar, Mukul, Adams, Brent L.
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Overview

Electron backscatter diffraction is a very powerful and relatively new materials characterization technique aimed at the determination of crystallographic texture, grain boundary character distributions, lattice strain, phase identification, and much more. The purpose of this book is to provide the fundamental basis for electron backscatter diffraction in materials science, the current state of both hardware and software, and illustrative examples of the applications of electron backscatter diffraction to a wide-range of materials including undeformed and deformed metals and alloys, ceramics, and superconductors.

The text has been substantially revised from the first edition, and the authors have kept the format as close as possible to the first edition text. The new developments covered in this book include a more comphrensive coverage of the fundamentals not covered in the first edition or other books in the field, the advances in hardware and software since the first edition was published, and current examples of application of electron backscatter diffraction to solve challenging problems in materials science and condensed-matter physics.

About the Author, Adam J. Schwartz

Adam J. Schwartz is the Deputy Division Leader for Condensed Matter and High Pressure Physics in the Physics and Advanced Technologies Directorate. Dr. Schwartz joined LLNL as a post-doctoral research associate to investigate the systematics of displacive phase transformations after receiving his PhD from the University of Pittsburgh in 1991. His areas of interests focus on structure-propoerty-processing relations, aging and phase transformations in actinides; influence of microstructure and impurities on high-strain rate deformation behavior, texture and texture gradients in materials, intercrystalline defects and the role of grain boundary character distribution in materials, conventional and high resolution transmission electron microscopy, and electron backscatter diffraction. Dr. Schwartz has authored over 50 publications and has one patent.

Mukul Kumar joined as a staff scientist in the Materials Science and Technology Division in 1998 after completing a stint as a post-doctoral fellow at Johns Hopkins University. Prior to that, he received his PhD from the University of Cincinnati, where he was an Oak Ridge Institute for Science and Engineering Fellow and also received the ASM International Arthur Focke Award for his dissertation work. His areas of interest include the relationship between properties and microstructures, particularly as related to extreme environments encountered in turbine jet engine and nuclear reactor environments and high strain rate and pressure conditions; defect analysis using conventional transmission electron microscopy; and electron backscatter diffraction. Kumar has authored over 70 publications and has two patents.

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Editorials

Booknews

Provides the fundamental basis for electron backscatter diffraction (EBSD), briefly covers the crystallography required for application, discusses the latest hardware and software available, and describes specific applications of EBSD. Chapter topics include representations of texture in orientation space, automated EBSD, phase identification using EBSD, and three-dimensional orientation imaging. Other topics are buying a system, strategies for analyzing EBSD datasets, use of EBSD data in mesoscale numerical analyses, characterization of deformed microstructures, and continuous recrystallization and grain boundaries in a superplastic aluminum alloy. Schwartz is affiliated with Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory. Annotation c. Book News, Inc., Portland, OR (booknews.com)

Book Details

Published
June 11, 2026
Publisher
Springer-Verlag New York, LLC
Pages
406
Format
Hardcover, 2009
ISBN
9780387881355

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