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Dislocations & Colloids

Dislocations: Line defects in 3D xtals. Point defects in 2D xstals (Often difficult to study in atomic systems) Colloids: small particles that are Brownian and therefore thermal (Form crystals, easy to see, slow). Dislocations & Colloids. Schall et al., SCIENCE 305, 1944-1948 (Sep 2004)

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Dislocations & Colloids

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  1. Dislocations: Line defects in 3D xtals. Point defects in 2D xstals (Often difficult to study in atomic systems) Colloids: small particles that are Brownian and therefore thermal (Form crystals, easy to see, slow) Dislocations & Colloids Schall et al., SCIENCE 305, 1944-1948 (Sep 2004) Schall et al., NATURE 440: 319-323 (Mar 2006)

  2. Restricted Dislocation Mobility in Colloidal Peanut Crystals Itai CohenSharon J. Gerbode Stephanie H. LeeChekesha M. Liddell Physics Materials Science and Engineering Cornell University, Ithaca NY 900nm

  3. Degenerate Crystal* • Particle centers form a sparse, aperiodic decoration of a Kagomé lattice • Particle lobes tile a triangular lattice • Particle orientations uniformly populate 3 lattice directions *K.W. Wojciechowski et al., PRL1991

  4. Familiar turf: 2-D crystals of spheres Vast existing body of knowledge on hard spheres: • Standard structure characterization – triangular peaks in g(r) and sixfold coordination • Plasticity, yield, and other material properties are well described by established theories of dislocation motion (Taylor, Orowan, Polanyi, 1934) • 2-D melting is extensively studied: KTHNY theory of dislocation and disclination unbinding Crystal Translational & orientational order Hexatic Expon. decaying translational & power law decaying orient. order Isotropic No translational & expon. decaying orient. order

  5. Important differences between crystals of spheres and DCs Certain particle orientations block slip.

  6. 5 In thermodynamic crystals, slip occurs via the motion of dislocations. 7

  7. 5 In thermodynamic crystals, slip occurs via the motion of dislocations. 7

  8. 5 In thermodynamic crystals, slip occurs via the motion of dislocations. 7

  9. 5 In thermodynamic crystals, slip occurs via the motion of dislocations. 7

  10. 5 In thermodynamic crystals, slip occurs via the motion of dislocations. 7

  11. 5 In thermodynamic crystals, slip occurs via the motion of dislocations. 7

  12. 5 In thermodynamic crystals, slip occurs via the motion of dislocations. 7

  13. 5 In thermodynamic crystals, slip occurs via the motion of dislocations. 7

  14. 5 In thermodynamic crystals, slip occurs via the motion of dislocations. 7

  15. 5 In thermodynamic crystals, slip occurs via the motion of dislocations. 7

  16. 5 In thermodynamic crystals, slip occurs via the motion of dislocations. 7

  17. 5 7 Observed mechanisms for dislocation nucleation and glide in DCs A dislocation glides via the shifting of two particles, one that slides and one that swings to let the defect pass.

  18. Dislocations can only glide short distances between obstacles

  19. Dislocations can only glide short distances between obstacles

  20. d = maximum glide distance Dislocations can only glide short distances between obstacles d= 4.6±0.2 …so how can dislocations travel long distances, as in shearing or melting?

  21. Dislocation reactions allow defects to turn, bypassing obstacles Schematic created using http://physics.syr.edu/thomson/thomsonapplet.htm primary author Cris Cecka, ccecka@stanford.edu see M. Bowick, Science 299 (2003) 1716

  22. Dislocation reactions allow defects to turn, bypassing obstacles Schematic created using http://physics.syr.edu/thomson/thomsonapplet.htm primary author Cris Cecka, ccecka@stanford.edu see M. Bowick, Science 299 (2003) 1716

  23. Dislocation reactions allow defects to turn, bypassing obstacles Schematic created using http://physics.syr.edu/thomson/thomsonapplet.htm primary author Cris Cecka, ccecka@stanford.edu see M. Bowick, Science 299 (2003) 1716

  24. Dislocation reactions allow defects to turn, bypassing obstacles Schematic created using http://physics.syr.edu/thomson/thomsonapplet.htm primary author Cris Cecka, ccecka@stanford.edu see M. Bowick, Science 299 (2003) 1716

  25. Dislocation reactions allow defects to turn, bypassing obstacles Schematic created using http://physics.syr.edu/thomson/thomsonapplet.htm primary author Cris Cecka, ccecka@stanford.edu see M. Bowick, Science 299 (2003) 1716

  26. Dislocation reactions allow defects to turn, bypassing obstacles Schematic created using http://physics.syr.edu/thomson/thomsonapplet.htm primary author Cris Cecka, ccecka@stanford.edu see M. Bowick, Science 299 (2003) 1716

  27. Dislocation reactions allow defects to turn, bypassing obstacles Reactions are topologically required to conserve burgers vector. = +

  28. z Experimentally observed dislocation reactions allow turning past obstacles 5 5 7 7 7 5 Burgers vector is conserved: = +

  29. Using dislocation reactions, is long-range transport feasible? • Estimate energetic cost assuming: • Two dislocations separate by N lattice constants in an otherwise perfect crystal. • They glide along a zig-zag pathway, using dislocation reactions to turn at obstacles. • Extra dislocations created by reactions are stationary. ~ d N The energetic cost for this separation is: In crystals of spheres: Ep N Es ln(N)

  30. Spheres Peanuts Both terms grow like ln(N): If the separation energy increases linearly with N: S(N) ln(N) Es(N) ln(N) S(N) ln(N) Ep(N) N We are left with some compelling questions … • Shear Response • Since glide along a straight path is forbidden, slip is blocked and degenerate crystals will be stiff. How do degenerate crystals respond to imposed shear? • Melting Free Energy:F = E(N) – TS(N) By what (new?) mechanisms will degenerate crystals melt?

  31. Simple geometric constraints can dramatically alter material properties • Degenerate crystals of peanut particles are structurally similar to crystals of spheres. • The pairing of particle lobes creates obstacles that block dislocation glide. • Restricted dislocation motion alters the plasticity and the melting mechanisms. • Connection to crumpling? • Thank you: • Fernando Escobedo (Chem. & Biomolecular Eng., Cornell University) • Angie Wolfgang (Physics, Cornell University) Gerbode et al., PRL (2008)

  32. Frame 52 of 07_10_08 1.5sphere.2min

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