L4: Crystal Structures And Defects Flashcards
Describe the two main structures materials can adopt
Crystalline - arranged in regular repeating pattern throughout material. Fixed bond lengths and angles. Metals and many ceramics are like this under normal conditions
Amorphous- no regular arrangement, lengths and angles distorted, no long range order through material
In practise what are the 4 structures of materials?
Single crystal- whole material has one arrangement of atoms (eg Si)
Amorphous - whole material amorphous (eg glass, some polymers)
Semi- crystalline- has crystalline regions surrounded by amorphous regions (important for some polymers)
Polycrystalline- many small single crystal regions, oreintated at random to eachother (eg most metals in manufacture)
In a polycrystalline material, what is a rough grain size?
10-60 micro m
What determines the arrangement of atoms within the solids?
Bond type,
Bond strength,
Number of bonds between neighbours,
Aim is to minimise E of system
What is the unit cell?
The smallest segment that can be repeated in 3D
- Usually only a few atoms but maybe thousands
- defined by lengths of 3 edges (a,b,c) and the angles between them (alpha, beta, gamma)
Define polymorphic
Can adopt more than 1 crystal structure. Which one depends on temp and pressure.
- under diff circumstances one is more thermodynamically favourable than another
Define allotropic
Pure elements which adopt diff structures at diff temps and pressures
What are the 3 common metallic crystal structures? What are their coordination numbers and some egs?
Face centred cubic- 12, eg Cu, silver, gold, Al, Fe 912C- 1394C
Body centred cubic- 8, eg molybdenum, tungsten, Fe below 912C
Hexagonal close packed,12, eg Zn, Mg
Why do macroscopic properties of materials differ considerably to those predicted by bonding?
Defects In arrangement of atoms in crystal lattice- ie vacancies, dislocations, impurities
Weak interactions at grain boundaries in polycrystalline materials
Why do grain boundaries have higher E than the bulk of he material?
Irregular bond lengths and coordination numbers of atoms in these regions
Crystal planes do not match so there’s a transition region a few atomic layers wide
Define a vacancy?
What can it also be called?
A hole formed at a specific location in the crystal structure due to the absence of an atom
Aka point defect
What does the number of vacancies depend on?
Temperature (energy given into crystal)
Higher temp= more vacancies
What is an advantage (2) and disadvantage (1) of vacancies?
Increases disorder- favourable
Costs energy as breaks bonds and stretches others- unfavourable
Enable relatively easy diffusion of atoms through solid lattice- atoms move into hole then another fills its hole etc
Energy allows atom to be ejected from system
What are the 2 types of dislocations?
And what is the typical quantity of dislocations in a material?
Screw dislocations
Edge dislocations- extra, incomplete plane of atoms in the crystal structure
Typical quantity- 10m per mm3
Define elastic deformation and explain the 2 egs?
A materials bonds stretch but return to original shape when the load is removed
Tensile load- 2 forces pull out
Shear load- 2 forces applied, one at top, one at bottom, diff directions