W.D. Callister, Materials science and engineering an introduction, 5 th Edition, Chapter 3

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W.D. Callister, Materials science and engineering an introduction, 5 th Edition, Chapter 3 MM409: Advanced engineering materials Crystallograp hy

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MM409: Advanced engineering materials. W.D. Callister, Materials science and engineering an introduction, 5 th Edition, Chapter 3. Crystallography. Crystal structure. - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

Transcript of W.D. Callister, Materials science and engineering an introduction, 5 th Edition, Chapter 3

Page 1: W.D. Callister, Materials science and engineering an introduction,  5 th  Edition,  Chapter 3

W.D. Callister, Materials science and engineering an introduction, 5th Edition, Chapter 3

MM409: Advanced engineering materials

Crystallography

Page 2: W.D. Callister, Materials science and engineering an introduction,  5 th  Edition,  Chapter 3

Crystal structure

• The solid materials may be classified according to the regularity with which atoms or ions are arranged with respect to one another

• A crystalline materials is one in which the atoms are situated in a repeating or periodic array over large atomic distances

• In crystalline structures, atoms are thought of as being solid spheres having well-defined diameters

• This is termed the atomic hard sphere model in which spheres representing nearest-neighbor atoms touch one another

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An example of the hard sphere model

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Unit cells• The atomic order in crystalline solids indicates that small

groups of atoms form a repetitive pattern.

• Unit cells subdivide the structure into small repeated entities.

• A unit cell is chosen to represent the symmetry of the crystal structure.

• Unit cell is chosen to represent the symmetry of the crystal structure

• Thus, the unit cell is the basic structural unit or building block of the crystal structure.

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Metallic crystal structure

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BCC

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FCC

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Density computations

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Crystal systems

The unit cell geometry is completely defined in terms of six

parameters:

3 edge lengths, a, b and c

3 interaxial angles , and These are termed as ‘lattice parameters’

of the crystal structure.

Fig: A unit cell with x, y, and z coordinate axes, showing axial lengths (a, b, and c) and interaxial angles (, , and )

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Crystallographic directions and planes

When dealing with crystalline materials, it is often becomes necessary to specify some particular crystallographic plane of atoms or a crystallographic direction.

3 integers or indices are used to designate directions and planes.

The basis for determining index values is the unit cell. Coordinate system consists of three (x, y and z) axes.

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Crystallographic directionsA crystallographic direction is defined as a line

between two points, or a vector.Steps:1. A vector of convenient length is positioned

such that it passes through the origin of the coordinate system

2. The length of the vector projection on each of the 3 axes is determined; a, b & c

3. Reduce them to the smallest integer values; u, v & w

4. The 3 indices are enclosed in square brackets, thus: [uvw].

The [100], [110], and [111] directions with in a unit cell.

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Crystallographic planesCrystallographic planes are specified by three Miller indices as (hkl).Any two planes parallel to each other are equivalent and have identical indices.

A unit cell with x, y, and z coordinate axes, showing axial lengths (a, b, and c) and interaxial angles (, , and ).

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Steps in determining (hkl)1. Define origin of axis

2. At this point the crystallographic plane either intersects or parallels each of the 3 axes; the length of the planar intercepts for each axis is determined in terms of the lattice parameter a, b and c

3. Reciprocal of these numbers are taken

4. These numbers are changed to set of smallest integers

5. Enclose integer indices within parentheses (hkl)

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Fig: Representations of a series each of (110) and (111) crystallographic planes.

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Atomic arrangementsAtomic arrangement depends on crystal structure

Fig: (a) Reduced-sphere FCC unit cell with (110) plane. (b) Atomic packing of an FCC (110) plane. Corresponding atom positions from (a) are indicated

Fig: (a) reduced-sphere BCC unit cell with (110) plane. (b) Atomic packing of a BCC (110) plane. Corresponding atom positions from (a) are indicated

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Closed-packed crystal structures

ABC, ABA, ACB, ACA

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Figure: Close-packed plane staking sequence for hexagonal close-packed.

Figure: Close-packed plane staking sequence for FCC.

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Noncrystalline solids

Fig: Two-dimensional schemes of the structure of (a) crystalline silicon dioxide and (b) noncrystalline silicon dioxide.