Twin Boundaries and Stacking Faults in Monazite (Monoclinic LaPO4)

2004 ◽  
Vol 819 ◽  
Author(s):  
Randall S. Hay

AbstractMonazite (LaPO4) was indented at room temperature. Deformation twin boundaries and stacking faults were characterized by high resolution transmission electron microscopy. Kinked deformation twins were also characterized and analyzed. Three types of stacking faults associated with climb-dissociated partial dislocations were observed. Two were found on twin boundaries, and a third in the lattice. Formation mechanisms are discussed. The superimposition of stacking faults along twin boundaries during deformation twinning and the glide of climb-dissociated partial dislocations allowed by stacking fault migration are discussed. The possible relationship between the formation mechanisms for these defects and the low- temperature recrystallization and self-annealing of defects in monazite is considered.

2004 ◽  
Vol 821 ◽  
Author(s):  
Randall S. Hay

AbstractMonazite (LaPO4) was indented at room temperature. Deformation twin boundaries and stacking faults were characterized by high resolution transmission electron microscopy. Kinked deformation twins were also characterized and analyzed. Three types of stacking faults associated with climb-dissociated partial dislocations were observed. Two were found on twin boundaries, and a third in the lattice. Formation mechanisms are discussed. The superimposition of stacking faults along twin boundaries during deformation twinning and the glide of climb-dissociated partial dislocations allowed by stacking fault migration are discussed. The possible relationship between the formation mechanisms for these defects and the low- temperature recrystallization and self-annealing of defects in monazite is considered.


1988 ◽  
Vol 133 ◽  
Author(s):  
Vijay K. Vasudevan ◽  
Robert Wheeler ◽  
Hamish L. Fraser

ABSTRACTThe dislocation structures in rapidly solidified Al3Ti with the DO22 structure and the ternary Al-25Ti-8Ni (at.%) alloy with the L12 structure deformed in compression in the temperature range of 25 to 800°C have been studied by transmission electron microscopy. The room temperature deformation microstructure of the Al3Ti compound is characterized by the presence of stacking faults/order twins on {111} planes bounded by partial dislocations with Burgers vector b=1/6<112], as reported by others. At intermediate temperatures, besides the stacking faults, slip is also observed as bands on the {001] plane delineated by dislocations with b=1/2<110] which bound APB's. At 600°C, the reported increase in ductility is associated here with additional slip on the {001)<110], {001)[100] and {001)[010] systems. Dislocations with b=<110] exist as pairs of partial dislocations with b=1/2<110] connected by APB's. The mean separation between the partials was measured to be 30 nm, corresponding to an APB energy of ≍32 mJ.m-2 on the (001) plane. Observations also indicate that the APB energy is anisotropic, i.e., is considerably higher on the {111} planes compared to the {001) plane. The deformation microstructure of the Al-25Ti-8Ni L12 alloy is characterized by slip of dislocations with b=<110> gliding on {111} planes, a major fraction of which exist as dipoles. Following deformation at 300°C, there is essentially no evidence of dissociation of these dislocations, although some dissociated dislocations on (001) having b=l/2<110> are also observed. With an increase in temperature, there is a considerable increase in dislocation activity and strong evidence for 1/2<110> dissociated dislocations is present.


Author(s):  
J. Doerschel

AbstractDislocation configurations induced by room temperature microindentations on the (001) face of GaSb (undoped and Te-doped) have been studied using high voltage transmission electron microscopy. Perfect and partial dislocations could be found in all four arms of the dislocation rosette around the indent. Microtwins and rarely single stacking faults are associated with the partials. Contrary to other binary III–V compounds, an “inverse” glide prism along the [1[unk]0]/[[unk]10] rosette arms is created and it is bounded by {111}


1995 ◽  
Vol 399 ◽  
Author(s):  
J. Tanimura ◽  
O. Wada ◽  
Y. Endoh ◽  
M. Imaizumi ◽  
T. Ogama

ABSTRACTStructure of stacking faults in a ZnSe epitaxial layer grown on a GaAs(001) buffer layer was determined with transmission electron microscopy. Two stacking faults were formed in pairs on (111) and (111) planes with the same polarity and met at a point which is a few atomic layers away from the interface between ZnSe and GaAs. Partial dislocations were found to be the Shockley type ones with a Burgers vector of 1/6<211>. Atomic force microscopy showed that hillocks were formed in pairs at a surface where the pair of stacking faults existed in the layer. Moreover, it was observed that the pair of stacking faults elongated along the <110> direction by gliding on the {111} faulted planes under annealing at 200°C for 30min. Formation mechanisms of the pair of stacking faults have been discussed.


Author(s):  
Raja Subramanian ◽  
Kenneth S. Vecchio

The structure of stacking faults and partial dislocations in iron pyrite (FeS2) have been studied using transmission electron microscopy. Pyrite has the NaCl structure in which the sodium ions are replaced by iron and chlorine ions by covalently-bonded pairs of sulfur ions. These sulfur pairs are oriented along the <111> direction. This covalent bond between sulfur atoms is the strongest bond in pyrite with Pa3 space group symmetry. These sulfur pairs are believed to move as a whole during dislocation glide. The lattice structure across these stacking faults is of interest as the presence of these stacking faults has been preliminarily linked to a higher sulfur reactivity in pyrite. Conventional TEM contrast analysis and high resolution lattice imaging of the faulted area in the TEM specimen has been carried out.


Further experiments by transmission electron microscopy on thin sections of stainless steel deformed by small amounts have enabled extended dislocations to be observed directly. The arrangement and motion of whole and partial dislocations have been followed in detail. Many of the dislocations are found to have piled up against grain boundaries. Other observations include the formation of wide stacking faults, the interaction of dislocations with twin boundaries, and the formation of dislocations at thin edges of the foils. An estimate is made of the stacking-fault energy from a consideration of the stresses present, and the properties of the dislocations are found to be in agreement with those expected from a metal of low stacking-fault energy.


1994 ◽  
Vol 364 ◽  
Author(s):  
JÖrg M.K. Wiezorek ◽  
S. A. Court ◽  
C.J. Humphreys

AbstractThe fine structure and the character of a dislocations on prism planes have been determined for room-temperature deformed polycrystalline Ti3Al using a combination of experimental and computational techniques of transmission electron microscopy (TEM). Within the resolution limits of the weak-beam technique the fine structure of prism plane a dislocations in Ti3Al is found to be planar and to comprise only a single ribbon of antiphase boundary and no experimentally observable stacking faults.


2014 ◽  
Vol 778-780 ◽  
pp. 319-323
Author(s):  
Rii Hirano ◽  
Michio Tajima ◽  
Hidekazu Tsuchida ◽  
Kohei M. Itoh ◽  
Koji Maeda

Polarization characteristics of luminescence from partial dislocations (PDs) in 4H-SiC have been investigated by room-temperature photoluminescence (PL) imaging. After expansion of Shockley stacking faults by high-power laser irradiation, PL from PDs tilted by 6° from their Burgers vector (6°-PDs) was observed with almost the same PL peak energy as that of 30°-Si (g) PDs. The PL from the 30°-Si (g) and 6°-PDs which were mobile under illumination were both found to be polarized perpendicular to their dislocation lines. In contrast, the PL from immobile 30°-C(g) PDs was not polarized. The present results suggest that the carriers bound to the 30°-Si (g) and 6°-PDs have anisotropic wave functions and those bound to 30°-C(g)PDs have isotropic wave functions.


1985 ◽  
Vol 46 ◽  
Author(s):  
D. K. Sadana ◽  
J. M. Zavada ◽  
H. A. Jenkinson ◽  
T. Sands

AbstractHigh resolution transmission electron microscopy (HRTEM) has been performed on cross-sectional specimens from high dose (1016 cm−2) H+ implanted (100) GaAs (300 keV at room temperature). It was found that annealing at 500°C created small (20-50Å) loops on {111} near the projected range (Rp)(3.2 μm). At 550-600°C, voids surrounded by stacking faults, microtwins and perfect dislocations were observed near the Rp. A phenomenological model explaining the observed results is proposed.


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