MED 131 Materials Engineering Testing (1), (2) (3) (4), (5) (6)
MED 131 Materials Engineering Testing (1), (2) (3) (4), (5) (6)
Semiconductors
Silicon Transistors and integrated Unique electrical
circuits behavior
4
Representative strengths of various categories of materials
1-Crystal Structure
Crystals
• The periodic array of atoms, ions, or molecules that form the solid is called the Crystal Structure
Crystal Structure Space (Crystal) Lattice + Basis
• A Crystal Structure is formed by “putting” the identical atoms )group of atoms( on the points
of the space lattice
• This group of atoms is called the Basis
Departures From the “Perfect Crystal”
• A “Perfect Crystal” is an idealization that does not exist in nature. In some ways, even a crystal
surface is an imperfection, because the periodicity is interrupted there.
• We also know that each atom undergoes thermal vibrations around their equilibrium positions for
temperatures T > 0K. These can also be viewed as “imperfections”.
• Real Crystals always have foreign atoms (impurities), missing atoms (vacancies), & atoms
between lattice sites (interstitials) where they should not be. Each of these spoils the perfect crystal
structure.
The Three General Types of Solids
Single Crystal, Polycrystalline, and Amorphous
• Each type is characterized by the size of the ordered region within the material. An ordered region is a
spatial volume in which atoms or molecules have a regular geometric arrangement or periodicity.
• All solids have “resistance” to changes in both shape and volume.
• Solids can be Crystalline or Amorphous
• Crystals are solids that consist of a periodic array of atoms, ions, or molecules
– If this periodicity is preserved over “large” )macroscopic( distances the solid has “Long-range
Order”
• Amorphous solids do not have Long-Range Order, but they often have Short Range Order
The fourteen Bravais lattices are grouped into seven crystal systems
Crystalline Solids
• Definitions:
• Single Crystals, ideally have a high degree of order, or regular geometric periodicity, throughout
the entire volume of the material.
• A Crystalline Solid is the solid form of a substance in which the atoms or molecules are arranged in
a definite, repeating pattern in three dimensions.
Polycrystalline Solids
• A Polycrystalline Solid is made up of an aggregate of many small single crystals (crystallites or
grains). Polycrystalline materials have a high degree of order over many atomic or molecular
dimensions.
• These ordered regions, or single crystal regions, vary in size & orientation with respect to one
another. These regions are called grains (or domains) & are separated from one another by grain
boundaries.
Vacancy (4,5)substitutional
2 impurities
Self-interstitials 5
Point defects: (a) vacancy, (b) interstitial atom, (c) small substitutional atom, (d) large
substitutional atom, (e) Frenkel defect, (f) Schottky defect. All of these defects disrupt the
perfect arrangement of the surrounding atoms.
2-Dislocations(line defect):
Dislocation - A line imperfection in a crystalline material.
Screw dislocation - A dislocation produced by skewing a crystal so that one atomic plane produces
a spiral ramp about the dislocation.
the perfect crystal (a) is cut and sheared one atom spacing, (b) and (c). The line along
which shearing occurs is a screw dislocation..
Edge dislocation - A dislocation introduced into the crystal by adding an ‘‘extra half plane’’ of
atoms.
Mixed dislocation - A dislocation that contains partly edge components and partly screw
components.
Slip - Deformation of a metallic material by the movement of dislocations through the
crystal.
3-Surface Defects
Surface defects - Imperfections, such as grain boundaries, that form a two-
dimensional plane within the crystal.
(a) The atoms near the boundaries of the three grains do not have an equilibrium spacing or
arrangement. (b) Grains and grain boundaries in a stainless steel sample.
4-Bulk or Volume Defects
➢ Pores: affect optical, thermal, mechanical properties
➢ Cracks: affect mechanical properties
➢ Foreign inclusions: affect electrical, mechanical, optical properties
Importance of defects:
Point, Line, and Area defects exist in solids :
1-The number and type of defects can be varied and controlled
2-Defects affect material properties (e.g., grain boundaries control crystal slip).
3-Defects may be desirable or undesirable (e.g., dislocations may be good or bad, depending
on whether plastic deformation is desirable or not.)