Title: Grain Boundary Migration Mechanism: S5 Tilt Boundaries
1Grain Boundary Migration Mechanism S5 Tilt
Boundaries
Hao Zhang, David J. Srolovitz Princeton Institute
for the Science and Technology of Materials,
Princeton University
2Reminder elastically driven boundary migration
- Drive grain boundary migration with an elastic
driving force - even cubic crystals are elastically anisotropic ?
equal strain ? different strain energy - measure boundary velocity ? deduce mobility
- Applied strain
- constant biaxial strain in x and y
- free surface normal to z ???iz 0
- note, typical strains (1-2) ? not linearly
elastic - Measure driving force
- apply strain exxeyye0 and siz 0 to perfect
crystals, measure stress vs. strain and integrate
to get the strain contribution to free energy - includes non-linear contributions to elastic
energy
S5 (001) tilt boundary
3Reminder Simulation / Bicrystal Geometry
010 S5 36.87º
4Reminder Mobility vs. Inclination
- Mobilities vary by a factor of 4 over the range
of inclinations studied at lowest temperature - Variation decreases when temperature ? (from 4
to 2) - Minima in mobility occur where one of the
boundary planes has low Miller indices
5Approach
- Look in detail at atomic motions as grain
boundary moves a short distance - Focus on one boundary (a22º), time 0.3 ns,
boundary moves 15 Å - For every 0.2 ps, quench the sample (easier to
view structure) repeat 1500X - X-Z (- to boundary) and X-Y (boundary plane)
views remember this
Boundary Plane View
Color - potential energy
Trans-boundary Plane View
6Interesting Observations 1
Boundary Plane - XY
Atomic displacements Dt0.4ps, t30ps
Atomic displacements Dt5ps
- Substantial correlated motions within boundary
plane during migration
7Interesting Observations 2
Trans-boundary plane XZ
Atom positions during a period in which boundary
moves downward by 1.5 nm Color von Mises shear
stress at atomic position redhigh stress
- Regular atomic displacements periodic array of
hot points
8Interesting Observations 3
Trans-boundary plane XZ
Atom positions during a period in which boundary
moves downward by 1.5 nm Color ? time redlate
time, blueearly time
- Atomic displacements ? symmetry of the
transformation
9Coincidence Site Lattice
- Part of the simulation cell in trans-boundary
plane view - CSL unit cell
- Atomic jump direction
?,? - indicate which lattice Color indicates
plane A/B
Displacements projected onto CSL Interesting
displacement patterns
10Atomic Path for S5 Tilt Boundary Migration
- Translations in the CSL
- Types of Atomic Motions
- Type I
- Immobile coincident sites -1 d1 0 Å
- Type II
- In-plane jumps 2, 4, 5
- d2d41.1 Å, d51.6 Å
- Type III
- Inter-plane jump - 3
- d32.0 Å
11Simulation Confirmation
Trans-boundary plane XZ
? initial average position projected on
trans-boundary plane ? final average position
came from the same atoms in initial Color
indicates plane A/B
- The atoms that do not move (Type I) are on the
coincident sites - Plane changing motions (Type III), are usually
as predicted
12Simulation Confirmation - Type III Displacements
Boundary Plane - XY
Trans-boundary plane XZ
Atomic displacements Dt0.4ps, t30ps
Color von Mises shear stress at atomic position
- The red lines on the left ( XY-plane) indicate
the Type III displacements - These are the points of maximum shear stress
13The Big Questions
- How are these different types of motions
correlated? - which is the chicken and which is the egg?
- What triggers the motions that lead to boundary
translation? - Can we use this information to explain how
mobility varies with boundary structure
(inclination)?
14Boundary Plane - XY
Transition Sequence
Color- time blue- early time
Trans-boundary plane XZ Colors ? Time
Sequence is 1,3,4 then 2 5
15Type II Displacements
Trans-boundary plane XZ
Atom positions during boundary moves downward by
1.5 nm Color Voronoi volume change red ?over
10, blue ?over 10
- Excess volume triggers Type II displacement events
16Connection with Grain Boundary Structure
- The higher the boundary volume, the faster the
boundary moves - More volume ? easier Type II events ? faster
boundary motion
17Type III Displacements
Boundary Plane - XY
Atomic displacements Dt5ps
18Excess Volume Transfer During String Formation
Boundary Plane - XY
- Colored by Voronoi volume
- In crystal, V11.67Å3
- Excess volume triggers string-like (Type III)
displacement sequence - Net effect transfer volume from one end of the
string to the other - Displacive not diffusive volume transport
- Should lead to fast diffusion
19Correlation with Boundary Self-diffusivity
- Diffusivity along tilt axis direction is
correlated with boundary mobility - Diffusivity along tilt axis indicative of Type
III events - Diffusivity much higher along tilt-axis direction
than normal to it
20How Long are the Strings?
Boundary Plane - XY
- Display atoms in 0.4 ps time intervals with
displacements larger than 1.0 Å - Arrow indicates the direction of motion in the
X-Y plane
- 3 or 4 atom strings are most common
- Some strings as long as the entire simulation
cell - -10 atoms
21Another Measure of Simulation Size Effect
- What happens if we make the simulation cell
thinner in the tilt axis direction?
Sequence is 1,3,4 then 2 5
- Strings (Type III events) cannot be longer than
simulation cell size - The boundary mobility drops rapidly for cell
sizes smaller than 6 atom spacings (12 Å)
22Migration Picture
Atomic Path
- A volume fluctuation occurs at the boundary
- A Type II displacement event occurs
- Triggers a Type III (string) event
- Transfers volume
- ? Boundary translation
Transition Sequence
1,3,4 then 2 5