Crystal Basics
Crystal Basics
Plastic deformation
• deformation which remains after load is removed
• atomic rearrangements (change of neighbours)
1
On surface: slip can be seen in the form of slip steps along lines where
the slip planes intersect the surface
φ A
λ τ R = σ cos λ cos φ
r
n
r
s
Maximum shear stress if slip plane and slip direction are under 45o
to the tensile axis.In single crystals: Slip starts on slip system with
highest resolved shear stress
2
How do lattice planes slip?
Not: breaking all bonds simultaneously (this would imply a perfectly strong, but
also perfectly brittle material!)
3
‘Type’ of dislocation depends on orientation of the dislocation line
with respect to the Burgers vector.
A dislocation loop
Dislocation = boundary of
slipped area
4
Stress required to move dislocations:
A dislocation pinned
by a localized obstacle
5
Stress fields lead to dislocation interactions
Dislocation density
6
dγ
Rate of deformation by slip (shearing rate ):
dt
proportional to
• dislocation density
• Burgers vector modulus b
• dislocation velocity v
dγ
‘Orowan’s equation’: = ρ bv
dt
Dislocation climb:
where NC = stress exponent for climb (typically ~3), ESD activation energy
for self-diffusion (formation + migration energies of vacancies)
7
Diffusional creep:
Creep rate τ
ND
E
Γ& = Γ& 0 exp − D
G kT
Experiments at constant
temperature but varying stress
8
Different deformation mechanisms operate in general simultaneously
But: Usually one mechanism (the fastest) prevails
N
dγ τ
i
E
For rates in the form = Γ& i0 exp − i
dt i G kT
N Nj
τ
i
E τ Ej
Γ& i0 exp − i = Γ& j0 exp −
G
kT G kT
Γ& 0 τ Ei − E j
hence ln i0 + ( N i − N j ) ln =
Γ& G kT
j