Edge, Screw, and mixed dislocations

  • Thread starter Thread starter scott_alexsk
  • Start date Start date
  • Tags Tags
    Edge Mixed Screw
AI Thread Summary
The discussion centers on the relative abundance and occurrence of edge and screw dislocations in materials, particularly in metallic crystals. It highlights that mixed dislocations are prevalent due to the complexity of real materials, which often exhibit both edge and screw characteristics. An estimate suggests that edge dislocations may constitute about 10-20% of dislocations in typical metallic crystals, although this figure is not definitive and varies based on material properties. The conversation notes that edge dislocations tend to be stabilized at high temperatures, while screw dislocations are more common at low temperatures. Participants share personal experiences, indicating that most dislocations observed in alloys and polycrystalline metals are mixed, and emphasize the growing interest in dislocation dynamics through recent literature, including notable works by Johannes and Julia Weertman.
scott_alexsk
Messages
335
Reaction score
0
Does anyone have an idea as to the relative abundance of each of these types? Why will one type occur over the other in a given situation?

Thanks,
-Scott
 
Engineering news on Phys.org
An excellent question. In reality mixed type prevails (if you go as far as to consider 3D dislocation lines in a realistic material with its imperfect structure including point and volume defects, most dislocations have both edge and screw parts) since both main types are rather constrictive in their definitions, and its for example easy to "introduce" an edge part to a screw dislocation. I got to check this out from somewhere but remember when one material physics Prof. was "pushed" with the same question at some point very reluctantly he was "willing" to give edge dislocations a fraction of 10-20% in a typical metallic crystal (without giving any specifics - he probably just wanted to end the unease at that point :biggrin: ). I've no idea how accurate that estimate is - it does make sense "a somewhat" - but the problem as I see it is the answer is specific (like lattice dependent for one) and in reality the classification is quite difficult since our edge and screw models are only components of the real ones with all their jogs and complicated arrays. I'll see what Cottrell for one has to say.
 
scott_alexsk said:
Does anyone have an idea as to the relative abundance of each of these types? Why will one type occur over the other in a given situation?
Typically, edge dislocations are stabilized (possibly, they have a very low mobility) at high temperatures, and screw dislocations at low temperatures.
 
Thanks guys!
 
I just picked up a nice little book -

Elementary Dislocation Theory by Johannes and Julia Weertman.

I just started it and it seems decent.


In my experience, I've seen mostly mixed and that includes dislocation loops and tangles. However most of my experience is with hcp Zr and Zr-alloys, and refractory alloys, and most of that is irradiated.

I believe dislocations in alloys and poly-crystalline metals are mostly mixed.
 
Last edited:
It seems like the successes of discrete & continuum dislocation dynamics are resulting in a new rise in everything 'dislocations' related. Or whether it was ever really "down" ... . Year ago picked up a very good example of this: Computer Simulation of Dislocations, by Bulatov & Cai, which have enjoyed immensely. Johannes Weertman also has an excellent book "Dislocation Based Fracture Mechanics", which contains pretty much everything relevant need to know of the particular field (Griffith-Inglis crack, Zener-Stroh-Koehler crack, Yoffe crack, Bilby-Cottrell-Swinden-Dugdale crack, lots about dislocation mechanics, shielding and antishielding, and plenty of elastic-plastic theory). Julia and Johannes must have some pretty "interesting" table conversations :biggrin: .
 

Similar threads

Replies
4
Views
1K
Replies
34
Views
3K
Replies
9
Views
2K
Replies
1
Views
3K
Replies
5
Views
1K
Replies
10
Views
2K
Back
Top