Crystal Structure and Properties
Crystal Structure and Properties
ISSUES TO ADDRESS...
How do atoms assemble into solid structures? (for now, focus on metals) How does the density of a material depend on its structure? When do material properties vary with the sample (i.e., part) orientation?
MECH 221
PM Wood-Adams
Fall 2008
Crystal Structure
Motivation: Many of the properties of materials (especially mechanical) are determined by the arrangement of the atoms. This arrangement is called the materials crystal structure. An important distinction Atomic structure relates to the number of protons and neutrons in the nucleus of an atom, as well as the number and probability distributions of the electrons. Crystal structure pertains to the arrangement of atoms in the crystalline solid material.
MECH 221
PM Wood-Adams
Fall 2008
Atoms can be arranged either in a regular, periodic array (i.e., long-range order) or completely disordered (amorphous). We need a way to specify crystallographic directions and planes. c
To illustrate the concept of crystal structure and lattice systems, we first identify a coordinate system (x, y, z):
a
z x y b
We cant specify directions or planes without knowing what the reference system is.
MECH 221 PM Wood-Adams Fall 2008
crystalline SiO2
Adapted from Fig. 3.18(a),
Callister 6e.
Noncrystalline materials... atoms have no periodic packing occurs for: -complex structures -rapid cooling "Amorphous" = Noncrystalline
MECH 221 PM Wood-Adams
Si
Oxygen
noncrystalline SiO2
Adapted from Fig. 3.18(b),
Callister 6e.
Fall 2008
METALLIC CRYSTALS
tend to be densely packed. have several reasons for dense packing: -Typically, only one element is present, so all atomic radii are the same. -Metallic bonding is not directional. -Nearest neighbor distances tend to be small in order to lower bond energy. have the simplest crystal structures. We will look at three such structures...
MECH 221 PM Wood-Adams Fall 2008
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In terms of the hard sphere model we say the atoms are touching in the close-packed directions!
MECH 221
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Fall 2008
a R=0.5a
close-packed directions contains 8 x 1/8 = 1 atom/unit cell
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Fall 2008
Coordination # = 8
Callister 6e.
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Fall 2008
R
Adapted from Fig. 3.2,
Callister 6e.
atoms volume 4 3 ( 3a/4) 2 unit cell atom 3 APF = volume 3 a unit cell
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MECH 221
Coordination # = 12
Callister 6e.
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Callister 6e.
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A B C
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2D Projection
Callister 6e.
THEORETICAL DENSITY,
# atoms/unit cell
Example: Copper
Data from Table inside front cover of Callister (see next slide): crystal structure = FCC: 4 atoms/unit cell atomic weight = 63.55 g/mol (1 amu = 1 g/mol) atomic radius R = 0.128 nm (1 nm = 10-7cm) Vc = a3 ; For FCC, a = 4R/ 2 ; Vc = 4.75 x 10-23cm3
Carbon is a good example of allotropy, it has 3 crystal structures with very different properties.
From Principles of Electronic Materials and Devices 2nd Ed., S.O. Kasap, McGraw-Hill
MECH 221
PM Wood-Adams
Fall 2008
Metals/ Alloys
Composites/ fibers
10
Based on data in Table B1, Callister *GFRE, CFRE, & AFRE are Glass, Carbon, & Aramid Fiber-Reinforced Epoxy composites (values based on 60% volume fraction of aligned fibers in an epoxy matrix). Zirconia Al oxide Diamond Si nitride Glass-soda Concrete Silicon Graphite
Ceramics have...
(g/cm3)
5 4 3 2 1
Glass fibers PTFE Silicone PVC PET PC HDPE, PS PP, LDPE GFRE* Carbon fibers CFRE* Aramid fibers AFRE*
Polymers have...
Composites have...
intermediate values
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Wood
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Fall 2008
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POLYCRYSTALS
1 mm
Adapted from Fig. K, color inset pages of Callister 6e. (Fig. K is courtesy of Paul E. Danielson, Teledyne Wah Chang Albany)
Nb-Hf-W plate with an electron beam weld. Each "grain" is a single crystal. If crystals are randomly oriented,
overall component properties are not directional.
MECH 221
PM Wood-Adams
Fall 2008
SINGLE VS POLYCRYSTALS
Single Crystals
-Properties vary with direction: anisotropic. -Example: the modulus of elasticity (E) in BCC iron:
E (diagonal) = 273 GPa
Data from Table 3.3, Callister 6e. (Source of data is R.W. Hertzberg,
Polycrystals
-Properties may/may not vary with direction. -If grains are randomly oriented: isotropic.
(Epoly iron = 210 GPa)
200 m
Adapted from Fig. 4.12(b), Callister 6e. (Fig. 4.12(b) is courtesy of L.C. Smith and C. Brady, the National Bureau of Standards, Washington, DC [now the National Institute of Standards and Technology, Gaithersburg, MD].)
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Measurement of:
Critical angles, c, for X-rays provide atomic spacing, d.
Read more about this subject in the text book. Learn how to use Braggs Law.
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1 g in 2 m c o ys in ra X-
ut o
g in go
X-
d=n/2sinc
c
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Iron atoms arranged on a copper (111) surface. These Kanji characters represent the word atom.
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MECH 221
The same atoms can have more than one crystal structure.
914
Tc 768
BCC Stable
cool down
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SUMMARY
Atoms may assemble into crystalline or amorphous structures. We can predict the density of a material, provided we know the atomic weight, atomic radius, and crystal geometry (e.g., FCC, BCC, HCP). Material properties generally vary with single crystal orientation (i.e., they are anisotropic), but properties are generally non-directional (i.e., they are isotropic) in polycrystals with randomly oriented grains.
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