ON
ORDER
TWINNING
B. HANSSONt
and R.
IN
AuCu*
S. BARNES:
Electron microscopic examin8tion of thin films from ordered AuCu I hes revealed feulted regions which have been interpreted 8s twins in which only the super-lattice is rotated. The development of these “order” twins can be inferred, 8nd it is suggested thet they are generated by the movement of &(lOl) dislocations on successive {lOl} pl8nes. This twinning, 8s 8 mode of stress relief, is discussed. SUR LES MACLES
D’ORDRE
DANS
AU CU
L’examen en microscopic Qlectroniquede pellicules minces de Au Cu B 1’Qtatordonnb 8 mis en Qvidence l’existence de rbgions perturbbes qui ont Bti interpn%es comme &ant des ma&s dans lesquelles le super-r&eau seul 8 subi une rotation. On peut en dbduire le m&anisme de developpement de ces “macles d’ordre”: les auteurs estiment qu’elles sont engendrees par des mouvements de dislocation t(lO1) sur des plans {lOI} successifs. Cette formation de m8cle est discutbe en t8nt que mode de lib&&ion des contraintes. ZWILLINGSBILDUNG
DURCH
ORDUNG
IN AuCu
Elektronenmikroskopische Untersuchungen diinner Folien 8us geordnetem AuCu I zeigen fehlgeordnet,e Gebiete, welche als Zwillinge gedeutet werden, bei denen nur die Uberstruktur gedreht wird. Ferner kBnnen Riickschliisse auf die Entwicklung dieser “Ordnungszwillinge” gezogen werdcn. Es wird gefolgert, da0 die bei der Bewegung von +(lOl)-Versetzungen auf aufeinander folgenden {lOl}-Ebenen gebildet werden. Diese Zwillingsbildung als eine mBgliche Art der Entspannung wird diskutiert.
1. INTRODUCTION
Above
a critical
temperature
together
of about
410°C the
alloy of50 at.% copper and 50 at.% gold forms a f.c.c. structure
(a = 3.878)
with a random distribution
copper and gold atoms.
Below ~410°C
orders to form a super-lattice planes composed
specimen
of
enabled
(002)
thickness
either of all copper or all gold atoms
(see Figs. 1 and 2(a)).
vacua
was then
atmosphere
the structure
with alternating
in
in
an
alumina
heated
by cold-rolling
to about
mm thick, were obtained.
by
in
[OOl]
at 325°C for 72 hr in vacua.
contraction
[OlO] directions
an (the
so that the structure
a-
In
this
ordered
in
and
the
b-axis
becomes
ratio of 0.92 (a = 3.96& boundaries
the
expansion
tetragonal there
and
are
ordered by annealing the foils
The foils were then thinned
respectively),
c = 3.67&.(l)
structure
direction [loo]
This treatment 5076 its original
After a final quench from
750°C the structure’was
and
The
Quenching and rolling were repeated until foils, -0.03
Because of the different sizes of is accompanied
slight
form
with no sign of cracking.
ordering
a
to
copper.
to 750°C in a hydrogen
and quenched into water.
it to be reduced
the copper and gold atoms, (the c-axis)
boat
an alloy of 50 at. o/o gold and 50 at. “/
an electrolyte
consisting
and three parts acetic acid.
with a f a
then examined
electrolytically
of one part perchloric
using acid
Suitable thin films were
in a Siemens Elmiskop
I operating
at
100 kV.
anti-phase
at which the (002) layers are out of step,
i.e. a (002) layer of gold atoms adjoins a layer of copper atoms and vice versa. these anti-phase
terval of five lattice axis.(l)
Between
boundaries
-380°C
and -410°C
occur with a regular in-
parameters
along
the a- or b-
This structure, known as AuCu II, will not be
considered
in this paper.
Below
-380°C
the anti-
phase boundaries occur irregularly (AuCu I structure). This paper reports some observations AuCu I structure. 2. EXPERIMENTAL
Spectroscopically troscopically
of faults in the
TECHNIQUE
pure gold (75.62 wt.%)
pure copper
and spec-
(24.38 wt. %) were melted
* Received August 14, 1963. t On attachment from Fysiska Institutionen, Ups818 Universitet, Uppsala, Sweden. $ Metallurgy Division, Atomic Energy Research Esteblishment, Harwell, Berks. ACTA METALLURGICA, 4
VOL. 12, MARCH 1964
Fm. 1. The unit cell of AuCu I in the orientation of the structure in Fig. 2. 315
ACTA
316
METALLURGICA,
VOL.
12,
1964
The orientations
of the films were determined
from
.electron diffraction patterns of the selected areas. The diffraction distorted distorted
patterns
of Figs.
3 and 4 were slightly
112 patterns and that of Fig. 5 was a slightly 101 pattern,
indicating
that the planes of
those foils were not, quite parallel to the (1122 and the (101) planes respectively.
(The directions
marked on
Figs. 3, 4 and 5 are therefore,
strictly
projections
on the planes of the
foils.)
of those directions
speaking,
the
In some cases the superlatt,ice spots could ,be
used to distinguish
between possible directions.
The planes of the faults were determined graphic projection of 800-1500
methods.
by stereo-
Assuming a foil thickness
A it was found that the (101) plane was
the only low-index
plane compatible
with the orienta-
tion and the width of the faults. FIG. 2(a). A model of the AuCu I structure. 3. EXPERIMENTAL
RESULTS
Figures 3, 4, 5 and 6 are typical photographs of different
regions of a thin film extracted
ordered foil.
taken
from an
In some areas structural faults reminis-
cent of elemental twins were seen. Figure 3 shows such faults which are only about each surface of the film.
3 ,u long but extend
This is presumably
stage of the fault which has developed
to
an early
further in the
region shown in Fig. 4, where the faults in some instances completely in it.
cross the area, and in others end
In Fig. 5 many of these faults end within the
area giving the impression
that the faults are pene-
trating in from the left.
In many areas the structure is
heavily
6) in the
twinned
(Fig.
manner
observed
previously.(24) FIG. 2(c). The three top (111) layers of the model shown in Fig. 2(a) have been sheared by a *[lOi] dislocation slipping on each of them. 4. DISCUSSION
It, has been shown(3*4) already that the { lOl} planes bound twins in AuCu. structural
It is therefore thought that the
faults shown in Figs. 3, 4 and 5 represent
early stages in the formation of these twins. In an ordered structure it is possible to have a type of twin in which the super-lattice which we have called an “order”
is reoriented
and
t’win to distinguish
it from the “normal” twin. A normal twin can be produced, for example, by a partial dislocation with l/6
FIG. 2(b). The AuCu I structure after a *[lOi] dislocation has produced shear on each successive (101) plane above the one indicated. In order to show the change of the (001) face the projection has been cut off and replaced on the other side (the (111) face).
[112] Burgers vectors slipping on successive (111) planes. The passage of this imperfect dislocation places atoms in new positions each of which is a reflection in the the original crystal. only
dislocations
twin boundary of one in In an ordered structure
with Burgers
vectors
representing
HANSSON
ANI) BARNES:
ORDER
TWINNING
IX
AuCu
317
FIG.. 3. An early stage in the formation of order twins in AuCu I. The plane of the foil is close to (121). The faults are on (011).
FIG. 5. Advancing twins. The foil is nearly parallel to (101). The twins are on (011).
FIG. 4. A later stage in the formation of order twins in AuCu I. The plane of the foil is close to (112). The faults are on (011).
FIG. 6. The twinned
structure
of AuCu I.
ACTA
318
METALLURGICA,
displacements between the same kind of atom produce no change in the order when they move. Two thirds of the possible ) (101) Burgers vectors represent displacements between different kinds of atom (see Fig. 1) A dislocation with such a Burgers vector will therefore on moving create an anti-phase boundary in its wake. If a similar dislocation then followed the first, so that a super-lattice dislocation had passed, this anti-phase boundary would be eliminated. If such a partial super-lattice dislocation slips on successive (IOl)planes an order twin can be formed in which only the order is changed, i.e. gold atoms occur in positions which are reflections, in the twin boundary, of the positions of gold atoms in the original crystal. This is ~ustra~d in the model of AuGu shown in Fig. 2(b) where the rearrangement of the original structure (Fig. 2(a)) is equivalent to that produced by the slip of a dislocation with ) [ lOl%jBurgers vector on each of three successive (101) layers. The order, with alternating (002) planes, is preserved but the orien~tion of the super-lattice in space has been rotated 90” so that order twinning has occurred with the (101) plane as the twin plane. (In an actual crystal the rotation of the super-lattice will not be exactly 90” because the unit cell is tetragonal, but (101) will still be a mirrror plane). Equivalent structural changes take place after ~rres~nd~g slip on other (101) planes exept (X10) and (110) which contain only one kind of atom. Slip on these latter planes can therefore not alter the order, and (110) and (li0) cannot be order twin planes. The situation where several dislocations have slipped on successive (101) planes is illustrated in Eig. 7 where the dislocations of opposite sign are shown at the extremities of the twinned region. The rotation of the planes containing only one type of atom by 90” is illustrated by the broken line. Therre will be an anti-phase bounda~ between the outermost dislocation and its neighbour and again between the third dislocation and the fourth, and so on. The boundaries of the faults shown in Figs. 3 and 4 do not all he exactly on (101) planes because the faults are either wedge shaped or lentieular. Therefore they
/
/
/
FIG. 7. A schematic diagram of an arrangement of dislocations on successive (101) planes. The broken lines indicate the orientation of the alternating layera of Au and Cu atoms. These layers are perpendicular to the plane of the paper (010) (cf. Fig. 2(b)).
VOL.
12,
1964
are probably made up of arrangements of the type shown in Fig. 7. To resolve these individual dislocations one would probably need a spacing of at least 200 A between them. Since the distance between successive (101) planes is ~1.3 A this means that for resolution of the dislocations the wedge angle must be less than tan-l l/MO. Interference fringes appear where the twin boundaries overlap on the micrographs which makes it possible, in a few cases, to get a rough estimation of the wedge angles. Geometrical considerations show that several of the faults in Fig. 4 have a wedge angle greater than tan-l l/150. This may explain why we have not been able to resolve unambiguously the ~lo~tions concerned. As mentioned in the introduction AuCu changes its structure from cubic to tetragonal on ordering. The stresses (compression along the a- and b-axes and tension along the c-axis) caused by this change are thought to be the reason for twinning since it has been shownf2) that at low ~mpe~tures the twins appear a&r the ordering has taken place. Since twinning is equivalent to a systematic shear on each successive atomic plane it can relieve some of the stresses if the shear (i.e. the twinning) occurs on a plane not containing the direction of the stresses. Thus twinning on (100) planes would not relieve the stresses but twirming on (101) and (111) planes would. In addition to the stress relief afforded by the shear on a (101) plane occurring during twinning, the rotation of the c-axis by 90” resulting from twinning will also reduce the stress, since the stress in the twinned region will no longer augment that due to the matrix; their c-axes being perpendicular. Although the electron microscope observations suggest that twinning occurs by a shear in the $(lOl) direction on successive (101) planes, it is worth considering what would happen if these ~locations were to slip on successive (111) planes. The atomic arrangement after the passage of 4 [lOI] dislocations on successive (111) planes is shown in Fig. 2(c). The structure is altered so that it becomes ordered with alternating (lli)planes instead of alternating (002) planes. The behaviour is the same with one of the other + (101) dislocations slipping on the same plane, but of course that which represents the displacement between atoms of the same kind does not effect the order. This is true for all the (“II> planes. Thus twinning of this sort is probably prevented by the forces w?lich determine the ordering of the atoms. This behaviour may restrict normal slip on (111) planes to those dislocations which do not produce an anti-phase boundary. Barker@) has suggested as a possible means of stress
HANSSON
relief the formation evenly distributed
BARNES:
AND
ORDER
of lamelae where the c-axes are in the three principal directions
in
TWINNING
Dissociation (112)
partial
original cube axes in the sequence XYZXYZ
The occurrence
plane.
This
were parallel to a { 1111
arrangement
has not
been
found
319
of a 4 (101) dislocation
above-mentioned
where the lamelae interfaces
AuCu
dislocations
the crystal. He suggested an arrangement where the lamelae had mutually perpendicular c-axes along the
. . . and
IN
unfavourable
must be associated
into two l/S
ma’y be restricted
by the
change in order which
with at least one of the part,ials.
of slip on 1111) planes could thus be
reduced.
in
While concluding
that order twinning on the {lOI>
practice and the reason seems to be that it cannot be
plane appears feasible and can explain the observations
produced
we may ask why twinning
planes.
by the movement Instead
of dislocations
one would
on these
get the above
radical
change in order. In a given { 11 l} plane the partial dislocation
concerned vectors.
can have three possible
l/6 (112) Burgers
One of these Burgers vectors is perpendicular
to the rows of copper
(or gold)
plane and when such a partial successive
is favoured
atoms
in the (lllj
dislocation
but one
is more effective
by changing the c-axis direction, alter the c-axis direction. a less systematic
while slip does not
Also slip, by being generally
process,
is lrss likely to relieve the
stresses on a fine scale. To summarize
it is suggest,ed t,hat order twins in
AuCu are generated
by dislocations
having a 4 (101)
both a normal twin and an order twin.
The move-
Burgers vector moving on successive (101) panes.
ment of either of the other two possible
partial dis-
evidence
locations
will, however, produce an ordered structure
with alternating (002) planes. likely,
(11 l} planes instead
of alternating
Thus the former type of twin is more
and in addition
the direction
for Harker’s
this is because
are probably because
Faults on
of less importance
Their generation
high energy involves
is both a stacking-fault This boundary
creating
with them.
a boundary
will have considerably
is no dislocation
No
complete that
mechanism
can occur.
One of us (B. H.) is indebted Research laboratory tillst&ndets
higher energy
twin atoms
a,re
from their original lattice sites, while in its
order twin only the type of atom is changed.
to the Atomic Energy
Establishment, Harwell , for facilities and to Dolepationrn fysik,
Stockholm.
Rwedrn,
providing fi5r fasta
for fina;:c ial
support
which
as it is probable that the
since in a normal
gives
ACKNOWLEDGiMENTS
REFERENCES
boundary
energy is greater than that of the anti-
phase boundary displaced
and rarely formed
associated
and an anti-phase
than an order twin boundary stacking-fault
been observed
the three cutting across (Fig. 5) but they
of the
there
whereby the arrangement
to the rows
of copper (or gold) atoms are likely to exist. (for example
which
of the stress
perpendicular
(11 l> planes have indeed occasionally
model
stress relief, has been found and it is suggested
would favour it. On these grounds only those normal twins with shear directions
than
slip in that it reduces the stresses both by shear and
slips on
(111) planes it will generate a twin which is
t,o slip as a
This is not understood,
reason may be that twinning
However, normal twinning could also produce stress relief.
means of stress relief.
1.
C. H. JOHANSSON and
J. 0.
l~sne.
.-lnv.
I’hysiE
25, 1
(1936). 2. G. C. KUCZYNSKI, K. F. HOCH~IISY md 11. DOYAMA, J. Appl. Phys. 26, 871 (1955). 3. D. W. PASHLICY and A. E. 3. F’n~s~~rn, I’roc. IS’ur. Reg. Conf. cm Elemon Microscop/, Delft. 1, 4”9 (1960). 4. M. HIRABAYASHI and S. ~Vm~xxar.-:~. Actn Hct. 10, 2.5 (1963). 5. D. HARKER, Trrrns. Amer. Sot. Vntrrlr 32, 210 (1944).