1 / 28

PX431 Structure and Dynamics of Solids

PX431 Structure and Dynamics of Solids. PART 2: Defects and Disorder Diane Holland P160 d.holland@warwick.ac.uk. 2. Defects and disorder (10L) Lectures 1-2: crystal defects – point, line and planar defects; dislocations and mechanical behaviour

arella
Télécharger la présentation

PX431 Structure and Dynamics of Solids

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. PX431 Structure and Dynamics of Solids PART 2: Defects and Disorder Diane Holland P160 d.holland@warwick.ac.uk

  2. 2. Defects and disorder (10L) • Lectures 1-2: crystal defects – point, line and planar defects; dislocations and mechanical behaviour • Lectures 3-5: point defects and non-stoichiometry; radiation induced defects; thermodynamics and stability of defects; elimination of defects • Lectures 6-7: influence of defects on diffusion, ionic conductivity, optical and electronic properties • Lectures 8-10: amorphous materials and glasses – formation and structure; structural theories; short and intermediate range order techniques for structural analysis – diffraction and the pair distribution function; total scattering; local probes (NMR, EXAFS, Mössbauer, IR and Raman)

  3. References M.T. Dove, Structure and Dynamics, OUP Appendix A ( 6 pages only!) S. R. Elliott, The physics and chemistry of solids, Wiley Chapter 3 W. D. Callister, Materials Science and Engineering, Wiley Chapters 4 & 7

  4. Disorder in crystalline materials • No perfectly ordered materials • Many materials are technologically of value because they are disordered/imperfect in some way: silicon devices – controlled levels of deliberate impurity additions (ppb) p-type : B Si  B + h n-type : P Si  P + e steels – additions of 0.1 to 1 at% other metals to improve mechanical properties and corrosion resistance

  5. stoichiometric compounds elements present in simple (small) integer ratios e.g. NaCl, BaTiO3 non-stoichiometric compounds non-integer e.g. Fe0.92O, Ca0.98Y0.02F2.02 Intrinsic defects– do not change overall composition – stoichiometric defects Extrinsic defects– created when foreign atom(s) introduced or there is valence change

  6. Types of defect: Crystal imperfections Orientational disorder Point defects

  7. Crystal imperfections perfect crystal – all atoms on their correct lattice positions (actual positions affected by extent of thermal vibrations which can be anisotropic) imperfect crystal extended defects - dislocations - grain boundaries - stacking faults - twinning

  8. Orientational disorder groups of atoms which are non-spherically symmetric -ammonium salts - linear chains Point defects vacancies, interstitials, incorrect atoms -Schottky - Frenkel - substitution

  9. Extent of disorder • Crystal imperfections - depends on preparation and mechanical history • Orientational disorder - depends on temperature • Point defects - Schottky and Frenkel normally v. low because formation energy high - Frenkel high in certain classes of materials e.g. Superionics - substitution to high degree in some materials - alloys - spinels

  10. CRYSTAL IMPERFECTIONS - dislocations - grain boundaries - twinning

  11. Transmission electron micrograph of Ti alloy – dark lines are dislocations (Callister: Materials Science and Engineering) Dislocations – linear defects Source: • growth • stress Evidence: - metals more deformable than predicted (but can be strengthened by impurities) - spiral growths on surface of some crystals • reactions occur at active surface sites Types: edge, screw, intermediate

  12. Dislocations revealed by etching ‘Etch pits’ produced by preferential etching by acid of the points where dislocations intersect the surface http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dislocation

  13. Edge dislocation – partial plane of atoms – lattice distorted where plane ends • Dislocations characterised by the Burgers vector, b • magnitude and direction found by tracing loop around the dislocation • for metals, b points in a close-packed direction and equals the interatomic spacing (Callister: Materials Science and Engineering)

  14. Dislocation motion • – dislocation moves under application of a shear stress (easy for bonds to swap between atoms at dislocation since they are already strained) (Callister: Materials Science and Engineering)

  15. Motion of dislocations called slip; the plane over which the dislocation moves is called the slip plane • For an edge dislocation: b is perpendicular to the dislocation line b is parallel to the direction of motion of the dislocation line under an applied stress. (Callister: Materials Science and Engineering)

  16. Shear stress Screw dislocation • partial slip of a crystal • on one side of dislocation line, crystal has undergone slip; on other side, crystal is normal • continued application of shear stress causes dislocation to move through crystal • b is parallel to dislocation line (opposite to Edge) • b is perpendicular to motion of this line (opposite to Edge) • but b is parallel to direction of shear and slip in both cases (Callister: Materials Science and Engineering)

  17. Quarter dislocation loop • combined edge and screw dislocation - pure edge on one face; • - pure screw on adjacent face; • - mixed in-between • loops expand easily but asymmetrically because edge moves easier than screw (Callister: Materials Science and Engineering)

  18. atom trap Pinning dislocations • dislocations make metals easier to deform • to improve strength of metals, need to stop dislocation motion trap with:- impurity atoms;- other dislocations (work hardening; - grain boundaries. (Callister: Materials Science and Engineering)

  19. Effects of crystal structure • Preferred set of slip planes on which dislocations can occur and also preferred slip directions for dislocation movement  slip system • slip plane– plane having most dense atom packing • slip direction – direction, in plane, having highest linear density • Energy required to move dislocation by one unit translation E |b|2 the most abundant dislocations in a material are those with the smallest value of b

  20. b b 2d In metals, direction of motion of dislocation is usually parallel to one of the directions of close packing Shear in close-packed direction by one unit b = d  E  d2, where d is the diameter of the sphere (atom) Shear in non-close-packed direction by one unit b = d 2  E  2d2

  21. Tensile F on crystal Tensile F b b Slip plane Resolved shear in slip plane F Tensile force produces shear force in slip plane

  22. F b Sb  Slip plane area Asp  Cross-section of crystal area A • Stress on plane • SA = F/Asp = F(cos )/A • Critical resolved shear stress - Sb - parallel to direction of slip on slip plane • Sb = SAcos  = (F/A)cos  cos  • - angle between slip direction and stress axis Maximum value of Sb occurs when  =  = 45o giving Sb = ½(F/A) When slip plane is either parallel or perpendicular to F, the resolved shear stress is 0 and slip cannot occur.

  23. F b  Sb  Slip plane area Asp  Cross-section of crystal area A

  24. Slip Systems • FCC metals are generally more malleable and ductile than HCP or BCC • BCC metals have many slip systems but planes are not close-packed • HCP metals have few slip systems

  25. (Callister: Materials Science and Engineering) FACE-CENTRED CUBIC AD, AF and DF are the 3 <110> slip directions ADF and the equivalent upper faces of the octahedron are the 4 {111} slip planes 3  4  12 slip systems

  26. Interfacial (planar) defects • boundaries separating regions of different crystal structure or crystallographic orientation • e.g. external surfaces (see final section of module)

  27. b D = b/ Grain boundaries Internal surfaces of a single crystal where ideal domains (mosaic) meet with some misalignment: high-angle and small(low)-angle. NB – in polycrystalline materials, grain boundaries are more extensive and may even separate different phases Small-angle grain boundary equivalent to linear array of edge dislocations bonding not fully satisfied  region of higher energy, more reactive, impurities present. (Callister: Materials Science and Engineering)

  28. mirror Twinning change in crystal orientation during growth (Callister: Materials Science and Engineering)

More Related