Crystalline Structure
Crystalline Structure
Types of Solids Amorphous: Solids with considerable disorder in their structures (e.g., glass). Amorphous: lacks a systematic atomic arrangement. Crystalline: Solids with rigid a highly regular arrangement of their atoms. (That is, its atoms or ions, self-organized in a 3D periodic array). These can be monocrystals and polycrystals.
Amorphous
crystalline
polycrystalline
To discuss crystalline structures it is useful to consider atoms as being hard spheres with well-defined radii. In this hard-sphere model, the shortest distance between two like atoms is one diameter. Lattice: A 3-dimensional system of points that designate the positions of the components (atoms, ions, or molecules) that make up the substance. Unit Cell: The smallest repeating unit of the lattice. The lattice is generated by repeating the unit cell in all three dimensions
Crystal Systems Crystallographers have shown that only seven different types of unit cells are necessary to create all point lattice Cubic a= b = c ; = = = 90 Tetragonal a= b c ; = = = 90 Rhombohedral a= b = c ; = = 90 Hexagonal a= b c ; = = 90, =120 Orthorhombic a b c ; = = = 90 Monoclinic a b c ; = = 90 Triclinic a b c ; 90 Bravais Lattices Many of the seven crystal systems have variations of the basic unit cell. August Bravais (1811-1863) showed that 14 standards unit cells could describe all possible lattice networks.
Principal Metallic Structures Most elemental metals (about 90%) crystallize upon solidification into three densely packed crystal structures: bodycentered cubic (BCC), facecentered cubic (FCC) and hexagonal close-packed (HCP)
Structure
Lattice Constant a, nm 0.289 0.287 0.315 0.533 0.429 0.316 0.405 0.361 0.408 0.352 0.409 0.2665 0.3209 0.2507 0.2950 0.5618 0.5209 0.4069 0.3584 c, nm
Atomic Radius, nm 0.125 0.124 0.136 0.231 0.186 0.137 0.143 0.128 0.144 0.125 0.144 0.133 0.160 0.125 0.147
BCC
FCC
HCP
a R=0.5a
close-packed directions contains 8 x 1/8 = 1 atom/unit cell
Coordination # = 8
atoms volume 4 3 ( 3a/4) 2 unit cell atom 3 APF = APF for a BCC = 0.68 volume a3 unit cell
Coordination # = 12 Close-packed directions: length = 4R = 2a Unit cell contains: 6 x 1/2 + 8 x 1/8 = 4 atoms/unit cell
atoms volume 4 3 ( 2a/4) 4 unit cell atom 3 APF = APF for a FCC = 0.74 volume 3 a unit cell
3 atoms
Close-Packed Structures
Both the HCP and FCC crystal structures are close-packed structure. Consider the atoms as spheres: Place one layer of atoms (2 Dimensional solid). Layer A Place the next layer on top of the first. Layer B. Note that there are two possible positions for a proper stacking of layer B.
The third layer (Layer C) can be placed in also teo different positions to obtain a proper stack. (1)exactly above of atoms of Layer A (HCP) or (2)displaced
A B C A
Interstitial sites
Locations between the normal atoms or ions in a crystal into which another - usually different - atom or ion is placed. o Cubic site - An interstitial position that has a coordination number of eight. An atom or ion in the cubic site touches eight other atoms or ions. o Octahedral site - An interstitial position that has a coordination number of six. An atom or ion in the octahedral site touches six other atoms or ions. o Tetrahedral site - An interstitial position that has a coordination number of four. An atom or ion in the tetrahedral site touches four other atoms or ions.
FCC Lattice has: 3 [=12()] Oh sites at edge centers + 1 Oh site at body center
Interstitial sites are important because we can derive more structures from these basic FCC, BCC, HCP structures by partially or completely different sets of these sites
Density Calculations
Since the entire crystal can be generated by the repetition of the unit cell, the density of a crystalline material, = the density of the unit cell = (atoms in the unit cell, n ) (mass of an atom, M) / (the volume of the cell, Vc) Atoms in the unit cell, n = 2 (BCC); 4 (FCC); 6 (HCP) Mass of an atom, M = Atomic weight, A, in amu (or g/mol) is given in the periodic table. To translate mass from amu to grams we have to divide the atomic weight in amu by the Avogadro number NA = 6.023 1023 atoms/mol The volume of the cell, Vc = a3 (FCC and BCC) a = 2R2 (FCC); a = 4R/3 (BCC) where R is the atomic radius.
Density Calculation
n: number of atoms/unit cell
nA = VC N A
A: atomic weight VC: volume of the unit cell NA: Avogadros number (6.023x1023 atoms/mole)
n = 4 atoms/cell,
VC = a 3 = (2 R 2 ) 3 = 16 2 R 3
Example
Rhodium has an atomic radius of 0.1345nm (1.345A) and a density of 12.41g.cm-3. Determine whether it has a BCC or FCC crystal structure. Rh (A = 102.91g/mol) Solution
nA = VC N A
Vc a 3 A 102.91g .mol 1 = = = = 1.3768 x10 23 cm 3 = 0.01376nm 3 3 23 1 n n N A 12.41g.cm 6.023 x10 atoms.mole If rhodium is BCC then n = 2 and a 3 = (4r ) 3 = 12.316r 3 3 a 3 12.316 x(0.1345nm) 3 = = 0.0149nm 3 n 2 If rhodium is FCC then n = 4 and a 3 = (4r ) 3 = 22.627 r 3 2 a 3 22.627 x(0.1345nm) 3 = = 0.01376nm 3 n 4 Rhodium has a FCC structure
Crystallographic direction
= 2R/Ll = 0.866
Ll = 2 R2/(Area ADEB)