Growing Crystalline Materials Jon Price Growth and the - - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

growing crystalline materials
SMART_READER_LITE
LIVE PREVIEW

Growing Crystalline Materials Jon Price Growth and the - - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

Growing Crystalline Materials Jon Price Growth and the construction of defects How are crystals made? What types of irregularities are possible? Why are irregularities so important? Transition between the three states of matter


slide-1
SLIDE 1

Growing Crystalline Materials

Jon Price

slide-2
SLIDE 2

Growth and the construction of defects

  • How are crystals made?
  • What types of irregularities

are possible?

  • Why are irregularities so

important?

slide-3
SLIDE 3

Transition between the three states of matter

  • Gas-solid

Condensation

  • Liquid-solid Precipitation

Crystallization

  • Solid-solid

Transformation

slide-4
SLIDE 4

The SOLUBILITY is defined as the concentration that is reached in a saturated solution (for T and P). Saturation - the amount of solute going into solution is equal to that which comes out of solution.

slide-5
SLIDE 5

Undersaturated

Crystal dissolves b/c more atoms leave than attach

Saturated

Crystal unchanged b/c as many atoms leave as attach

Oversaturated

Crystal grows b/c fewer atoms leave than attach

slide-6
SLIDE 6

So how does a crystal start growing? In a solution, random motions will create crystallite clusters. If undersaturated, the clusters disperse. The solution is oversaturated, clusters hang around, bump into each other, and begin to grow.

Nucleation

slide-7
SLIDE 7

Nucleation Barrier

It takes additional energy to form nuclei. This can limit when and how many crystals form.

slide-8
SLIDE 8

Growth has started. Next stop: the surface - where all the action is.

Unsatisfied bonds Charge distribution upset Incomplete coordination polyhedra Crystalline structure - lowers G Crystalline edges - raises G

slide-9
SLIDE 9

What makes a bubble round?

Controls on external shape

Could those same forces work for crystals? What’s the difference between this atom And this

  • ne

The greater the anisotropy of the structure, the more this is a problem!

slide-10
SLIDE 10

Which is the more stable configuration of 36 atoms?

slide-11
SLIDE 11

Four crystals growing in melt. Note angular faces typical of the 2/m crystals as seen from the 001 plane. Planes (facets) result from energy minimization along a crystallographic plane - depends on T, P, and X. Hornblende Ca2(Mg, Fe, Al)5 (Al, Si)8O22(OH, F)2

slide-12
SLIDE 12

On this phase diagram, there are two phases, a solid and a liquid. The line represents the conditions where both will be present at equilibrium

slide-13
SLIDE 13

From Blackburn & Dennen, 1998

slide-14
SLIDE 14
slide-15
SLIDE 15

Crystal growth results from diffusion of components to the crystal surface Crystals can grow in any medium - solids, liquids, gasses, supercritical fluids. Liquids and fluids may be melted rocks, C-O- H or aqueous fluids, or a mixture. All are contingent on component transport.

slide-16
SLIDE 16

Diffusion

In any matter over 0 K, atoms migrate. The rate

  • f movement depends on

how well the atoms are bonded. In a gas, atoms or molecules may dance around each other, or switch places.

slide-17
SLIDE 17

Although diffusion happens everywhere, we can see diffusion in places where atoms are initially separated The atoms will move in random

  • directions. As a consequence, the

atoms are no longer in distinct domains. With time, the random movements of the atoms lead to complete random dispersion of the atoms However, if there is a chemical gradient, the diffusion may become directional. This is not to say that the diffusion rate changes.

slide-18
SLIDE 18

From Blackburn & Dennen, 1998

slide-19
SLIDE 19

LLNL

Calcite - step growth

slide-20
SLIDE 20

Corners are higher energy - if diffusion cannot keep up with growth, the corners may grow much more rapidly than the faces.

Dendritic growth

Potential Face C r y s t a l Silver Ice I

slide-21
SLIDE 21

Several material scientists, like Nikolas Provatas at McMaster are exploring this type

  • f growth numerically

This is a really simplified model - but extremely computationally intensive.

slide-22
SLIDE 22
slide-23
SLIDE 23

Grain size

General principles The slower the change in conditions, the larger the grain size e.g. - slowly cooled rocks have bigger crystals than ones cooled rapidly Problems: it depends on the material - don’t compare apples and oranges

slide-24
SLIDE 24

More than one crystal… more than one bubble

Image from Smith, 1964

slide-25
SLIDE 25

In polycrystalline systems, atoms diffuse along the boundaries between

  • crystals. To minimize

energy, the chemical potential is to the center of curvature Net result: the boundary moves in the convex direction. Smaller crystals are consumed by larger ones

slide-26
SLIDE 26
  • 1. Equal forces -

boundary is pinned

  • 2. Fr<<Fm - particle

included

  • 3. Fr<Fm particle is

swept If there is a smaller grain

  • f another insoluble

material on the boundary, it resists the movement of the boundary The growing grain exerts a force Fm, the particle exerts a force Fr

slide-27
SLIDE 27

The entire system is trying to minimize energy Where three crystals meet, the forces generated by the energy along their boundaries must cancel to reach a minimum value.

slide-28
SLIDE 28

In three dimensions, grains that minimize their energy have near tetrakeidecahedral shapes

slide-29
SLIDE 29
slide-30
SLIDE 30

An example from an amphibolite

Image from Kretz, 1968

slide-31
SLIDE 31

Myrmekite

An intergrowth of quartz and feldspar

Likely result of too few nucleation sites Undercooling Viscosity contrasts Rapid diffusion

slide-32
SLIDE 32

Growth rates for albite crystals in an undercooled silicate melt = 10-6 cm/sec (Fenn, 1977) That’s 10 nm/sec. Compare that to the ionic radii in a SiO2 tetrahedron.

slide-33
SLIDE 33

Ostwald Ripening

Minimizing energy requires that smaller crystals are resolved so that bigger crystals may grow.

slide-34
SLIDE 34

Reactive growth

New minerals may form from recrystallization of reaction of preexisitng grains. Overgrowth, mantling, coronas This is a diffusion driven process. A not so natural example follows Periclase (MgO) + Corundum (Al2O3) reacts to Spinel (MgAl2O4)

slide-35
SLIDE 35

Prolonged runs at high temperature produce a solid state reaction between MgO and Al2O3, forming a layer of spinel

Impetus

slide-36
SLIDE 36

Growth

The width of the spinel layer is linear to the square root of time. Implies a diffusion controlled process.

slide-37
SLIDE 37

Growth Constant

Pressure

Growth rate may be parameterized following Tammann (1920)

k = (X2 / 2t)

k has the units of diffusivity Apparent Ea = ~410 kJ/mol Apparent Va changes, dependent on T.

slide-38
SLIDE 38

Boundary compositions

EMPA traverses of spinel

  • Stoich. spinel

Al enriched

1400 oC 4 GPa 89 hr 30 µm 600 oC 3.2 GPa 16 hr 66 µm 1978 oC 2.5 GPa 0.4 hr 115 µm

slide-39
SLIDE 39

Boundary compositions

Ratio of the slopes is always -0.661 (~ -2/3) for all runs Maintains charge balance (Mg 2+ vs. Al 3+) Formula for the spinel:

Mg1-3x, Al2+2x, [_]x, O4

slide-40
SLIDE 40

Growth requires local oversaturation of the chemical components. Initial crystallization begins with nucleation - energy intensive Post-nucleation growth is controlled by the surface of the phase. Growth is always a trick to reduce the energy of the system Atoms are added to reduce unsatisfied bonds and coordination through diffusion Rapid growth may produce crystals with high surface energy. Adjacent crystals must also minimize their energy