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Understanding Dislocations in Crystals

1. Dislocations are defects in crystalline materials that allow plastic deformation to occur at stresses lower than the theoretical strength of the material. 2. There are two main types of dislocations: edge dislocations, caused by the insertion or removal of half planes of atoms; and screw dislocations, caused by atomic planes shearing past one another. 3. Dislocations are characterized by their Burgers vector b, which represents the lattice displacement caused by the dislocation, and their line direction ξ, which is tangent to the dislocation line. The relationship between b and ξ determines whether the dislocation is edge or screw.

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0% found this document useful (0 votes)
120 views16 pages

Understanding Dislocations in Crystals

1. Dislocations are defects in crystalline materials that allow plastic deformation to occur at stresses lower than the theoretical strength of the material. 2. There are two main types of dislocations: edge dislocations, caused by the insertion or removal of half planes of atoms; and screw dislocations, caused by atomic planes shearing past one another. 3. Dislocations are characterized by their Burgers vector b, which represents the lattice displacement caused by the dislocation, and their line direction ξ, which is tangent to the dislocation line. The relationship between b and ξ determines whether the dislocation is edge or screw.

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Introduction to Dislocations

Plastic Deformation in Crystalline Materials

Kamyar Davoudi
Lecture 6

Fall 2015
Dislocations

slip no slip

A half crystal has been displaced by Because the theoretical shear


Perfect Crystal strength is much larger than the
lattice vector b along the cut plane A.
This does not change the atomic measured shear strength, the
structure inside the crystal. If we concept of dislocations was
assume the two half crystals have sled postulated. Now instead of
over each other, in the first lecture we assuming that two half crystals have
showed that the theoretical shear sled over each other, we assume a
stress will be ~ µ/10 which is much dislocation, which is the boundary
larger than the observed value. between the slipped and un-slipped
areas, sweeps along the cut plane A.

[figures from Bulatov & Cai, Computer Simulations of Dislocations, Oxford University Press, 2006.]
Edge Dislocations

One type of dislocations is edge dislocations. Here we can assume a


half plane is inserted in a perfect crystal or a half plane is removed
from a perfect crystal. Note that the extra half plane is not unique.
In this figure, we are dealing with a simple cubic structure.

[figure from Bulatov & Cai, Computer Simulations of Dislocations, Oxford University Press, 2006.]
Screw Dislocation

[Read, W.T., Dislocations in Crystals, McGraw Hill, 1953.]


Mixed Dislocations

[Read, W.T., Dislocations in Crystals, McGraw Hill, 1953.]


Dislocations Simulated by a Bubble Raft

[Read, W.T., Dislocations in Crystals, McGraw Hill, 1953.]


Line Direction

Line direction ξ is a unit vector tangent to the dislocation line.


Burgers Vector

Relation between b
and u?
FS/RH convention when!line direction ξ points into the paper.
For edge dislocations: b ⊥ ξ̂ b=∫
! du
or
∂ui
bi = ∫
! dui =∫! dxk
∂xk

!
For screw dislocations: b " ξ̂ [figures from Hirth & Lothe, Theory of Dislocations, and here ]
Edge and Screw Dislocations
!
•  For screw dislocations: b ⊥ ξ̂
!
•  For screw dislocations: b " ξ̂

•  Edge component:
! ! ! !
(
be = ξ × b × ξ )
•  Screw component:
! ! ! !
(
bs = b i ξ ξ )

[Hirth & Lothe, Theory of Dislocations, Wiley, 1982]


Termination of Dislocations
•  A dislocation cannot end within an otherwise
perfect crystal, but must terminate at
–  Free surface
–  Another dislocation
–  Grain boundary
–  Some other defects
•  Proved by Nabarro with formal elasticity
theory
Kirchhoff’s law

! ! !
b1 = b2 + b3

Axiom: Suppose N dislocations meet at a node. If all the ξ are taken as


positive taken from the node, we will have

!
N

∑ bi = 0
i=1

[Hirth & Lothe, Theory of Dislocations, Wiley, 1982]


Plastic Strain around Edge Dislocartion

y y

x
x
Ω

Plastic strain on half plane Ω


slip no slip
p1
ε = b δ( y)H(−x)
xy
2
[figures from Bulatov & Cai, Computer Simulations of Dislocations, Oxford University Press, 2006, AND Mura,
Micromechanics of Defects in Solids, 2nd ed, Springer, 1987 ]
Plastic Strain around Screw Dislocation
z
z
y x
y x

A
B

Plastic strain on half plane Ω

p1
ε = b δ( y)H(−x)
yz
2
[figures from Read, Dislocations in Crystals, McGraw Hill, 1953, AND Mura, Micromechanics of Defects in Solids,
2nd ed, Springer, 1987 ]
Elastic Fields around Screw Dislocation

b b ⎧


⎛ y ⎞⎟ π
⎜ ⎡ ⎤



uz = ⎨tan ⎜⎜ ⎟⎟⎟ + sgn( y) ⎢⎣1− sgn(x)⎥⎦ ⎬
−1
θ=
2π 2π ⎪


⎜⎝ x ⎠ 2 ⎪

b b y b x
εzθ = ⇒ εxz = − , εxy =
4πr 4π r 2
4π r 2
Importance of Additional Terms

0.5
0.2
uz êb 0.0
uz êb 0.0
- 0.2 - 0.52 2
2 2
1 1
1 1
0 0
0 0 y x
y x -1 -1
-1 -1
-2 -2
-2 -2

b ⎛ ⎞
−1 ⎜ y ⎟ b ⎧


⎛ ⎞ π
−1 ⎜ y ⎟⎟ ⎡ ⎤



uz = tan ⎜⎜ ⎟⎟ uz = ⎨tan ⎜
⎜ ⎟

+ sgn( y) ⎢

1− sgn(x)⎥
⎦ ⎬
2π ⎜⎝ x ⎟⎠ 2π ⎪


⎜⎝ x ⎠ 2 ⎪

1 b −y
εzx = ε(e)
zx
+ ε(zxp) = ∂ x uz =
2 4π r 2
1 b ⎡⎢ x ⎤

εzy = ε(e)
zy
+ ε( p)
zy
= ∂ u
y z
= ⎢ + 2πH(−x)δ( y)⎥
2 4π ⎢⎣ r 2
⎥⎦
Further Reading
1.  Bulatov,V., Cai, W., Computer Simulations of Dislocations,
Oxford University Press, 2006.
2.  Hirth, J.P., Lothe, J., Theory of Dislocations, 2nd ed., Wiley,
1982.
3.  Hull, D., Bacon, J.D., Introduction to Dislocations, 5th ed.,
Butterworth-Heinemann, 2011.
4.  Read, W.T., Dislocations in Crystals, McGraw Hill, 1953.
5.  Weertman, J., Weertman, J., Elementary Dislocation Theory,
Oxford University Press, 1992.

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