Kink (materials Science)
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Kinks are deviations of a
dislocation In materials science, a dislocation or Taylor's dislocation is a linear crystallographic defect or irregularity within a crystal structure that contains an abrupt change in the arrangement of atoms. The movement of dislocations allow atoms to sli ...
defect Defect or defects may refer to: Related to failure * Angular defect, in geometry * Birth defect, an abnormal condition present at birth * Crystallographic defect, in the crystal lattice of solid materials * Latent defect, in the law of the sale o ...
along its glide plane. In edge dislocations, the constant
glide plane In geometry, a glide reflection or transflection is a geometric transformation that consists of a reflection across a hyperplane and a translation ("glide") in a direction parallel to that hyperplane, combined into a single transformation. Bec ...
allows short regions of the dislocation to turn, converting into screw dislocations and producing kinks. Screw dislocations have rotatable glide planes, thus kinks that are generated along screw dislocations act as an anchor for the glide plane. Kinks differ from jogs in that kinks are strictly parallel to the glide plane, while jogs shift away from the glide plane.


Energy

Pure-edge and screw dislocations are conceptually straight in order to minimize its length, and through it, the
strain energy In physics, the elastic potential energy gained by a wire during elongation with a tensile (stretching) or compressive (contractile) force is called strain energy. For linearly elastic materials, strain energy is: : U = \frac 1 2 V \sigma \v ...
of the system. Low-angle mixed dislocations, on the other hand, can be thought of as primarily edge dislocation with screw kinks in a stair-case structure (or vice versa), switching between straight pure-edge and pure-screw dislocation segments. In reality, kinks are not sharp transitions. Both the total length of the dislocation and the kink angle are dependent on the free energy of the system. The primary dislocation regions lie in Peierls-Nabarro potential minima, while the kink requires addition energy in the form of an energy peak. To minimize free energy, the kink equilibrates at a certain length and angle. Large energy peaks create short but sharp kinks in order to minimize dislocation length within the high energy region, while small energy peaks create long and drawn-out kinks in order to minimize total dislocation length.


Kink movement

Kinks facilitate the movement of dislocations along its glide plane under
shear stress Shear stress (often denoted by , Greek alphabet, Greek: tau) is the component of stress (physics), stress coplanar with a material cross section. It arises from the shear force, the component of force vector parallel to the material cross secti ...
, and is directly responsible for
plastic deformation In engineering, deformation (the change in size or shape of an object) may be ''elastic'' or ''plastic''. If the deformation is negligible, the object is said to be ''rigid''. Main concepts Occurrence of deformation in engineering application ...
of crystals. When a crystal undergoes shear force, e.g. cut with scissors, the applied shear force causes dislocations to move through the material, displacing atoms and deforming the material. The entire dislocation does not move at once – rather, the dislocation produces a pair of kinks, which then propagates in opposite directions down the length of the dislocation, eventually shifting the entire dislocation by a
Burgers vector In materials science, the Burgers vector, named after Dutch physicist Jan Burgers, is a Vector (geometric), vector, often denoted as , that represents the Magnitude (vector), magnitude and direction of the lattice distortion resulting from a dislo ...
. The velocity of dislocations through kink propagation also clearly limited on the nucleation frequency of kinks, as a lack of kinks compromises the mechanism by which dislocations move. As shear force approaches infinity, the velocity at which dislocations migrate is limited by the physical properties of the material, maximizing at the material's sound velocity. At lower shear stresses, the velocity of dislocations end up relating exponentially with the applied shear force: :v_0 = C \tau^p, \,\! where :\tau is applied shear force :C and p are experimentally found constants The above equation gives the upper limit on dislocation velocity. The interactions of dislocation movement on its environment, particularly other defects such as jogs and
precipitates In an aqueous solution, precipitation is the "sedimentation of a solid material (a precipitate) from a liquid solution". The solid formed is called the precipitate. In case of an inorganic chemical reaction leading to precipitation, the chemic ...
, results in drag and slows down the dislocation: :v_D = v_0 e^, \,\! where :D is the drag parameter of the crystal Kink movement is strongly dependent on temperature as well. Higher thermal energy assists in the generation of kinks, as well as increasing atomic vibrations and promoting dislocation motion. Kinks may also form under compressive stress due to the buckling of crystal planes into a cavity. At high compressive forces, masses of dislocations move at once. Kinks align with each other, forming walls of kinks that propagate all at once.Barsoum, M. W., L. Farber, T. J. M. El-Raghy and M. T. A (1999). "Dislocations, kink bands, and room-temperature plasticity of Ti3SiC2." ''J Am Chem Soc,'' 30(7): 1727–1738. At sufficient forces, the tensile force produced by the dislocation core exceeds the fracture stress of the material, combining kink boundaries into sharp kinks and de-laminating the basal planes of the crystal.


References

{{reflist Crystallographic defects