Crystal Defects
Crystal Defects
Crystal Defects
Point 0 Vacancy
Line 1 Dislocations
Substitutional
impurity
Interstitial solid solution applies to carbon in α-iron.
The carbon atom is small enough to fit with some
strain in the interstice (or opening) among adjacent
Fe atoms in this important steel structure
But the interstitial solubility is quite low since the size mismatch of the site to the radius of
a carbon atom is only about 1/4
Defects in ionic solids
Frenkel
defect
Cation vacancy
+
cation interstitial
Schottky
defect
Cation vacancy
+
anion vacancy
POINT DEFECTS
• The simplest of the point defect is a vacancy, or vacant lattice site.
• All crystalline solids contain vacancies.
• Principles of thermodynamics is used explain the necessity of the
existence of vacancies in crystalline solids.
• The presence of vacancies increases the entropy (randomness) of
the crystal.
• The equilibrium number of vacancies for a given quantity of
material depends on and increases with temperature as follows: (an
Arrhenius model)
Total no. of atomic sites Energy required to form vacancy
Equilibrium no. of vacancies
T = absolute temperature in Kelvin
Nv= N exp(-Qv/kT) k = gas or Boltzmann’s constant
DISLOCATIONS
Edge dislocation
Screw dislocation
DISLOCATIONS
DISLOCATIONS
Random Structural
Geometrically necessary dislocations
A dislocation has associated with it two vectors:
t A unit tangent vector along the dislocation line
b The Burgers vector
Burgers Vector
Edge dislocation
Perfect crystal
RHFS:
Right Hand Finish to Start
convention
Edge dislocation
Direction of tt vector
dislocation line vector
b vector
Direction of b
Dislocation Motion
• Dislocation motion leads to plastic deformation.
• An edge dislocation moves in response to a shear stress applied in a
direction perpendicular to its line.
• Extra half-plane at A is forced to the right; this pushes the top halves
of planes B, C, D in the same direction.
• By discrete steps, the extra 1/2-plane moves from L to R by
successive breaking of bonds and shifting of upper 1/2-planes.
• A step forms on the surface of the crystal as the extra 1/2-plane
exits.
19
Dislocation is a boundary between the slipped and the unslipped parts
of the crystal lying over a slip plane
The intersection of the extra half-plane of atoms with the slip plane
defines the dislocation line (for an edge dislocation)
Direction and magnitude of slip is characterized by the Burgers vector
of the dislocation (A dislocation is born with a Burgers vector)
The Burgers vector is determined by the Burgers Circuit
Right hand screw (finish to start) convention is used for determining
the direction of the Burgers vector
As the periodic force field of a crystal requires that atoms must move
from one equilibrium position to another b must connect one
lattice position to another (for a full dislocation)
Dislocations tend to have as small a Burgers vector as possible
Compressive stress
field
Tensile stress
field
Positive edge dislocation
Negative edge dislocation
REPULSION
Edge Dislocation Glide
Shear stress
Surface
step
Screw dislocation
[1]
26
Slip Systems
• Dislocations move more easily on specific planes and in
specific directions.
• Ordinarily, there is a preferred plane (slip plane), and
specific directions (slip direction) along which dislocations
move.
• The combination of slip plane and slip direction is called
the slip system.
• The slip system depends on the crystal structure of the
metal.
• The slip plane is the plane that has the most dense
atomic packing (the greatest planar density).
• The slip direction is most closely packed with atoms
(highest linear density). 27
i ne
io nL
at
o c
i sl
D
w
cre t
S
b || t
If b || t
Johannes Martinus
BURGERS
Left-handed Right-handed
spiral ramp spiral ramp
Screw
Dislocation b parallel to t b antiparallel to t
Grain Boundaries
Grain boundary, was introduced as the boundary separating two small grains or
crystals having different crystallographic orientations in polycrystalline
materials. Within the boundary region, which is probably just several atom
distances wide, there is some atomic mismatch in a transition from the
crystalline orientation of one grain to that of an adjacent one.
Figure 16.2. At the grain boundary, there is a disturbance in the
atomic packing.
A pure tilt boundary causes a constant
angle of tilt between lattice planes of the
same type in adjacent regions of the
sample. It is composed of a regular array of
edge dislocations of the same sign in the
plane of the boundary. If the Burgers vector
of the dislocations is, b, and their spacing
is, D, then the angle of tilt is given by =
b/D.
A twist boundary causes a pure rotation
between two crystals of the same structure.
The boundary is composed of a regular
two-dimensional array of screw
dislocations of the same sign in the
boundary plane. If all the dislocations have
a Burgers vector, b, and their spacing in
the array is D, the twist angle is q = b/D
Figure 16.4. Low-angle twist boundary.
Low angle tilt grain boundary
~8º TILT BOUNDARY IN SrTiO3 POLYCRYSTAL
2.761 Å
No visible
Grain
Boundary
Dislocation
structures at
the Grain
boundary
Twin Boundary
Twin
High-resolution micrograph
Mirror related
variants
Twin plane
FCC stacking
with a stacking fault …ABC AB AB ABC…