Title: L03A: Chapter 3 Structures of Metals
1L03A Chapter 3 Structures of Metals Ceramics
- The properties of a material depends on the
arrangement of atoms within the solid. - In a single crystal the atoms are in an ordered
array called the structure. Single crystals are
necessary for many applications and can be very
large. For example, silicon crystals can be up to
2 feet in diameter - http//www.flickr.com/photos/davemessina/623130054
9/ - A polycrystalline material consists of many
crystals. Materials used for construction or
fabrication are usually polycrystalline. For
example - http//www.cartech.com/news.aspx?id578
- In this chapter we examine typical crystal
structures for metals, inorganic compounds, and
carbon. - You will see how to specify crystal planes and
directions. - You will learn how to calculate some properties
of crystals from their structure, including the
dependence on direction in their lattice. - Review calculation of areas for squares and
rectangles, and calculation of distances and
areas for right triangles, e.g. at the Math
Skills Review under Read, Study Practice at
WileyPLUS.com.
Last revised January 12, 2014 by W.R. Wilcox,
Clarkson University
2Amorphous and crystalline materials
- A material is crystalline if the atoms display
long-range order, i.e. the same repeating
arrangement over-and-over. - The atoms in some materials do not have
long-range order. These are called amorphous or
glassy. Most polymers are amorphous, but so are
some ceramics, metals, and forms of carbon.
- Equilibrium structures are those with the minimum
Gibbs energy G, although atomic movement in
solids is so slow that equilibrium is often not
reached at room temperature. (In thermodynamics
youll see that G H TS)
3Hard-sphere model of crystals
- We may show the atoms as points or small spheres
connected by lines, or we may show them as hard
spheres of defined diameter in contact with one
another. - For a metal with a face-centered cubic lattice
Unit cell. When repeated, generates the entire
crystal.
4Metallic Crystal Structures
- Bonding is not directional
- Minimum energy when nearest-neighbor distances
are small. - The electron cloud shields the positive cores
from one another. - Metals have the simplest crystal structures.
- We will examine the three most common.
- Two of their unit cells are based on a cube
Virtual Materials Science and Engineering (VMSE)
? http//higheredbcs.wiley.com/legacy/college/cal
lister/1118061608/vmse/xtalc.htm
5Atomic Packing Factor (APF)
APF calculation for a simple cubic structure
The coordination number is the number of nearest
neighbors. What is it here?
6Body Centered Cubic Structure (BCC)
Examples Cr, W, Fe(?), Ta, Mo
Coordination number?
How many touch the one in the center?
Coordination number 8
Number of atoms per unit cell?
1 center 8 corners x 1/8 2
7Atomic Packing Factor for BCC
8Theoretical Density
where n number of atoms/unit cell
A atomic weight (g/mol) VC Volume of
unit cell a3 for cubic NA Avogadro
constant 6.022 x 1023 atoms/mol
9Example Theoretical Density of Chromium
- Cr is body-centered cubic
- A 52.00 g/mol
- R 0.125 nm
- n 2 atoms/unit cell
10Face Centered Cubic Structure (FCC)Examples Al,
Cu, Au, Pb, Ni, Pt, Ag
How many atoms in the unit cell touch the atom in
the center of the front face?
Atoms only touch along face diagonals.
How many additional atoms touch it in the unit
cell in front of this one?
Coordination number 8 4 12
How many atoms in one unit cell?
6 face x 1/2 8 corners x 1/8 4
11Atomic Packing Factor for FCC
This is the maximum achievable APF and is one of
two close-packed structures.
12Crystal Systems
a, b, and c are the lattice constants
Only for the cubic system are the angles all 90o
and the lattice constants all the same.
13Crystal structure
- Seven different possible geometries for the unit
cell. - There are 14 Bravais lattices, with each point
representing the same atom or collection of atoms.
- Pure metals are usually FCC, BCC or HCP.
- Except for hexagonal, number of atoms per unit
cell1/8 at corners1/2 at face centersAll of
body centered
14Point Coordinates in a Lattice
- Point coordinates for the unit cell center are
- a/2, b/2, c/2 ? ½ ½ ½
-
- Point coordinates for unit cell corner are a, b,
c ?111 - Translation by an integer multiple of lattice
constants reaches an identical position in
another unit cell
15Miller Indices for Crystallographic Directions
examples 1, 0, ½ gt 2, 0, 1 gt 201
VMSE with examples, problems, exercises
16Linear Density of Atoms (LD)
Number of atoms
Length of direction vector
example linear density of Al in 110
direction FCC with a 0.405 nm
17Miller Indices for Crystallographic Planes
- Reciprocals of the three axial intercepts for a
plane, cleared of fractions common multiples. - All parallel planes have the same Miller indices.
- Algorithm (procedure)
- 1. If the plane passes through the origin,
translate so it does not. - 2. Read off the intercepts of the plane with the
axes in increments of the lattice constants (a,
b, c). For example, 1, 2, 2 - 3. Take reciprocals of those intercepts. If it
is parallel to an axis so that it doesnt
intersect it, the reciprocal is 0. For
example, 1, ½, ½ - 4. Convert the numbers to the smallest possible
integer values. For example, 2, 1, 1 - 5. Enclose those numbers in parentheses, with no
commas. For example (211). - 6. As with directions, a bar over a number
indicates it is negative. - VMSE with illustrations, problems, exercises
- Families of equivalent planes. For a cubic
structure, for example
18Three Low-index Planes
19Crystallographic Plane Examples
4. Miller Indices (110)
4. Miller Indices (100)
20Planar Density or Packing
- Atoms per unit area
- Very important for mechanical strength and for
chemical properties. - Essential step is to sketch the plane of
interest, and then use geometry to relate lattice
constant to atomic radius. - For example, iron foil can be used as a catalyst.
The atomic packing of the exposed plane is
important. - Draw (100) and (111) crystallographic planes
- b) Calculate the planar density for each of
these planes.
21Planar Density of (100) ?-Iron (Ferrite)
- For T lt 912?C the equilibrium structure of iron
is BCC.
Radius R 0.1241 nm
22Planar Density of (111) Ferrite
23Close-packed planes and structures
- 111 in FCC have metal atoms as close together
as possible. Called close-packed. - So FCC structure of metals is also sometimes
called cubic close packed. - In VMSE http//higheredbcs.wiley.com/legacy/colle
ge/callister/1118061608/vmse/xtalclose.htm - Watch close-packed 111 planes added to build
FCC http//departments.kings.edu/chemlab/animatio
n/clospack.html ABCABCABC , where A, B and C are
three possible positions of atoms. - In L-03B we look at another close-packed
structure for metals built of the same planes,
but in a different order, ABABAB.