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Module 2. Crystal Structure

This chapter discusses crystal structures and properties of materials. It addresses how atoms assemble into solid structures, how a material's density depends on its structure, and when material properties vary with orientation. It then examines common crystal structures in metals including simple cubic, body-centered cubic, and face-centered cubic. Equations for calculating theoretical density from crystal structure are provided.
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0% found this document useful (0 votes)
22 views19 pages

Module 2. Crystal Structure

This chapter discusses crystal structures and properties of materials. It addresses how atoms assemble into solid structures, how a material's density depends on its structure, and when material properties vary with orientation. It then examines common crystal structures in metals including simple cubic, body-centered cubic, and face-centered cubic. Equations for calculating theoretical density from crystal structure are provided.
Copyright
© © All Rights Reserved
We take content rights seriously. If you suspect this is your content, claim it here.
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Download as PDF, TXT or read online on Scribd
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RAISE YOUR

HAND if you are


ready to listen
for the next topic
Chapter 3-
CRYSTAL STRUCTURES &
PROPERTIES

ISSUES TO ADDRESS...
• How do atoms assemble into solid structures?

• How does the density of a material depend on


its structure?

• When do material properties vary with the


sample (i.e., part) orientation?

Chapter 3- 1
ENERGY AND PACKING
• Non dense, random packing Energy

typical neighbor
bond length

typical neighbor r
bond energy

• Dense, regular packing Energy

typical neighbor
bond length

typical neighbor r
bond energy

Dense, regular-packed structures tend to have


lower energy.
Chapter 3- 2
MATERIALS AND PACKING
Crystalline materials...
• atoms pack in periodic, 3D arrays
• typical of: -metals
-many ceramics
-some polymers crystalline SiO2
Adapted from Fig. 3.18(a),
Callister 6e.

Si Oxygen
Noncrystalline materials...
• atoms have no periodic packing
• occurs for: -complex structures
-rapid cooling
"Amorphous" = Noncrystalline noncrystalline SiO2
Adapted from Fig. 3.18(b),
Callister 6e.

Chapter 3- 3
METALLIC CRYSTALS
• tend to be densely packed.
• have several reasons for dense packing:
-Typically, only one element is present, so all atomic
radii are the same.
-Metallic bonding is not directional.
-Nearest neighbor distances tend to be small in
order to lower bond energy.

• have the simplest crystal structures.

We will look at three such structures...

Chapter 3- 4
SIMPLE CUBIC STRUCTURE (SC)
• Rare due to poor packing (only Po has this structure)
• Close-packed directions are cube edges.

• Coordination # = 6
(# nearest neighbors)

(Courtesy P.M. Anderson)


Chapter 3- 5
ATOMIC PACKING FACTOR
Volume of atoms in unit cell*
APF =
Volume of unit cell
*assume hard spheres
• APF for a simple cubic structure = 0.52
volume
atoms atom
a 4
unit cell 1 (0.5a)3
3
R=0.5a APF =
a3 volume
close-packed directions
unit cell
contains 8 x 1/8 =
1 atom/unit cell
Adapted from Fig. 3.19,
Callister 6e. Chapter 3- 6
BODY CENTERED CUBIC
STRUCTURE (BCC)
• Close packed directions are cube diagonals.
--Note: All atoms are identical; the center atom is shaded
differently only for ease of viewing.

• Coordination # = 8

Adapted from Fig. 3.2,


Callister 6e.

(Courtesy P.M. Anderson) Chapter 3- 7


ATOMIC PACKING FACTOR: BCC
• APF for a body-centered cubic structure = 0.68
Close-packed directions:
length = 4R
= 3a
Unit cell contains:
1 + 8 x 1/8
= 2 atoms/unit cell
R
Adapted from a
Fig. 3.2,
Callister 6e. atoms volume
4
unit cell 2 ( 3a/4)3
3 atom
APF =
volume
a3
unit cell
Chapter 3- 8
FACE CENTERED CUBIC
STRUCTURE (FCC)
• Close packed directions are face diagonals.
--Note: All atoms are identical; the face-centered atoms are shaded
differently only for ease of viewing.

• Coordination # = 12

Adapted from Fig. 3.1(a),


Callister 6e.

(Courtesy P.M. Anderson)


Chapter 3- 9
ATOMIC PACKING FACTOR: FCC
• APF for a body-centered cubic structure = 0.74
Close-packed directions:
length = 4R
= 2a
Unit cell contains:
6 x 1/2 + 8 x 1/8
= 4 atoms/unit cell
a
Adapted from
Fig. 3.1(a),
Callister 6e. atoms volume
4
unit cell 4 ( 2a/4)3
3 atom
APF =
volume
a3
unit cell
Chapter 3- 10
HEXAGONAL CLOSE-PACKED
STRUCTURE (HCP)
• ABAB... Stacking Sequence
• 3D Projection • 2D Projection

A sites
Top layer
B sites
Middle layer
A sites
Bottom layer
Adapted from Fig. 3.3,
Callister 6e.

• Coordination # = 12
• APF = 0.74

Chapter 3- 12
Chapter 3-
DEMO: HEATING AND
COOLING OF AN IRON WIRE
The same atoms can
• Demonstrates "polymorphism" have more than one
crystal structure.
Temperature, C
Liquid
1536
BCC Stable
1391
longer
heat up
FCC Stable
shorter!
914 longer!
BCC Stable
cool down
Tc 768 magnet falls off
shorter
Chapter 3- 22
THEORETICAL DENSITY, 

# atoms/unit cell Atomic weight (g/mol)

 nA
Volume/unit cell VcNA Avogadro's number
(cm3/unit cell) (6.023 x 10 23 atoms/mol)

Example: 1. Copper
2. Chromium
3. Gold

Chapter 3- 14
Data from Table inside front cover of Callister (see
next slide):
• crystal structure = FCC: 4 atoms/unit cell
• atomic weight = 63.55 g/mol (1 amu = 1 g/mol)
• atomic radius R = 0.128 nm (1 nm = 10 -7cm)

Vc = a3 ; For FCC, a = 4R/ 2 ; Vc = 4.75 x 10-23cm3

Result: theoretical Cu = 8.89 g/cm3

Compare to actual: Cu = 8.94 g/cm3

Chapter 3-
Characteristics of Selected Elements at 20C
At. Weight Density Crystal Atomic radius
Element Symbol (amu) (g/cm3) Structure (nm)
Aluminum Al 26.98 2.71 FCC 0.143
Argon Ar 39.95 ------ ------ ------
Barium Ba 137.33 3.5 BCC 0.217
Beryllium Be 9.012 1.85 HCP 0.114
Boron B 10.81 2.34 Rhomb ------ Adapted from
Table, "Charac-
Bromine Br 79.90 ------ ------ ------ teristics of
Cadmium Cd 112.41 8.65 HCP 0.149 Selected
Elements",
Calcium Ca 40.08 1.55 FCC 0.197 inside front
Carbon C 12.011 2.25 Hex 0.071 cover,
Cesium Cs 132.91 1.87 BCC 0.265 Callister 6e.
Chlorine Cl 35.45 ------ ------ ------
Chromium Cr 52.00 7.19 BCC 0.125
Cobalt Co 58.93 8.9 HCP 0.125
Copper Cu 63.55 8.94 FCC 0.128
Flourine F 19.00 ------ ------ ------
Gallium Ga 69.72 5.90 Ortho. 0.122
Germanium Ge 72.59 5.32 Dia. cubic 0.122
Gold Au 196.97 19.32 FCC 0.144
Helium He 4.003 ------ ------ ------
Hydrogen H 1.008 ------ ------ ------ Chapter 3- 15
DENSITIES OF MATERIAL CLASSES
Graphite/
metals ceramics polymers Metals/
Alloys
Ceramics/ Polymers
Composites/
fibers
Semicond
30
Why? Based on data in Table B1, Callister
Platinum *GFRE, CFRE, & AFRE are Glass,
Metals have... 20 Gold, W
Tantalum Carbon, & Aramid Fiber-Reinforced
• close-packing Epoxy composites (values based on
60% volume fraction of aligned fibers
(metallic bonding) 10 Silver, Mo
Cu,Ni
in an epoxy matrix).

 (g/cm3)
Steels
• large atomic mass Tin, Zinc
Zirconia
Ceramics have... 5
Titanium
4 Al oxide
• less dense packing Diamond
3 Si nitride
(covalent bonding) Aluminum Glass-soda
Concrete
Glass fibers
Silicon PTFE GFRE*
• often lighter elements 2 Magnesium Carbon fibers
Graphite CFRE*
Silicone
Polymers have... PVC
PET
Aramid fibers
AFRE*
PC
• poor packing 1 HDPE, PS
PP, LDPE
(often amorphous)
• lighter elements (C,H,O) 0.5 Wood
Composites have... 0.4
0.3
• intermediate values Data from Table B1, Callister 6e.
Chapter 3- 16
SUMMARY

• Atoms may assemble into crystalline or


amorphous structures.
• We can predict the density of a material,
provided we know the atomic weight, atomic
radius, and crystal geometry (e.g., FCC,
BCC, HCP).

Chapter 3- 23

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