THE
SURFACE
F. J.
SERF-DIFFUSION OF COPPER ENVIRONMENT* 3RADSHAW.t
R.
H.
AS
AFFECTED
BY
and C. WHEELER?
BRANDONt
Using mass-transfer methods, the surface self-diffusion of copper has been shown to depend on environment. An increase of oxygen pressure increases the surface diffusion rate, but interpretation on the basis of adsorbed oxygen is not simple. There was evidence of impurity effects in hydrogen environBetween 800°C and 400°C diffusion ments, with measurements in vacua being the most consistent. occurred with an activation energy (-20 koal) lower than that previously reported for temperatures above 800°C. EFFET DE L’ENVIRONNEMENT SUR L’ACJTO-DIFFUSION EN SURFACE DU CUIVRE En utilisant la m&hode du transport de masse, il est possible de montrw quo l’auto-diffusion en surface du cuivre est affect&e par l’environnement. Une pression d’oxyg&ne plus grande augment0 la en 88 basant SW la quantitb d’oxygine diffusion en surface mais l’interpr&ation du ph&om&ne, absorb& n’est gu&re simple. Des mesures fortes dans un environnement hydrogkne semblent prouver de8 mesures sous vide ont d’ailleurs confirm+5 ce point. Entre 800 et que les impure& ont une influence: 4OO”C, la chaleur d’activation ( ~20 kcal) du ph&om&ne de diffusion est plus basse que oelle annone& pr&%demment pour des tempbratures sup&ieures B 800°C. DIE
OBERFLBCHENSELBSTDIFFUSION DER
VON KUPFER UMGEBUNG
IN IHRER
ABHANGIGKEIT
VON
Mit Hilfe von Messungen der iibartragenen Substanzmenge wurde gezeigt, daIJ die OberflBchenselbstErhiihung des Sauerstoffdrucks erhijht die diffusion von Kupfer von der Umgebung abhiingt. Oberfliichendiffusions-Rate; eine Deutung auf Grund der Adsorption des Sauerstoffs ist jedoch nicht In Wasserstoffumgebung gab es Anzeichen fiir Verunreinigungseffekte; die Messungen in einfaoh. 800°C und 400°C erfolyte die Diffusion rnit einer vncuo stimmten am besten z.u8ammen. Z&when Aktivierungsenergie (-20 kcal), die geringer war, als friiher fiir Temperaturon oberhalb 800°C berichtet.
1. INTRODUCTION
Estimates
of the surface
in hydrogen
self-diffusion
have been made by mass-t.ransfer(l-~) tracer(5) methods.
The mass-transfer
of copper
and radioactive
di~cult.
method involves
data have been obtained The diffusion
coefficient,
obtained
were
surface
for copper, using grain boundary
by
Mullins
and
Shewmon(l)
gen with 10 % hydrogen. not give reproducible Gjostein(2) -45”C,
point
was
the
temperature
extended
dew
states that
points
down
to
using the grain boundary
with bicrystals,
measured
D, over surfaces
(110) and (11 I} and three surfaces of higher index at temperatures between 1069 and 847%. For all six surfaces $
was found to be between 48.6
and
The
52.2
kcal/moIe.
extreme
limits
of their
results, shown as two lines in Fig. 1: illustrate the fact
at 830°C did
that D, varied by no more than a factor of three over
at atmospheric
that
with
oxide
of nitro-
results and were omitted.
using hydrogen
a dew
experiments
though
measurements
near to {loo},
who
a .D,% of 13.5 x 10e5 cm2/sec at 1035°C and
3 x 1O--5 cm2/secat 930°C in an atmosphere
with
self-
atmospheres
and Shewmon,(3)
technique
of D,, the
first measurements
grooving
Choi
this way.
made
give the same values of D,.
-90°C
ing of scratches under surface energy forces and most
pitting
In his recent review Gjostein@)
hydrogen
a study of the grooving of grain boundaries or smooth-
at the same temperature, and surface
formation
between
I&er
the orientations
pressure,
checked
-12°C
and
range
from
found
studied.
Shewmon
and Choi(*) later
these results using a scratch technique good
agreement,
scratch smoothing
though
D, obtained
and from
was always slightly higher than that
D, could be expressed in the usual form, D, = D, exp (-Q,/kT) with a fixed value for Q, his results were D, = 6.5 x
at 870°C and have found values 4.5 times larger than
lo2 cm2 xec--I and Q, = 40.8 kcal/molo.
those
1070°C to 720°C.
Assuming
that
However
his
points on the Arrhenius plot can be fitted more closely with a curve Below
and this has been
780°C Gjostein
obtained
drawn
in Fig.
December 2, 1963. t Ministry of Aviation, Chemistry, Dept., Royal .4ircraft Establishment,
1.
some surface pitting
ACTA METALLURGICA,
Physics and Metallurgy Fernborough, Hants.
VOL. 12, SEPTEMBER
1964
measured
technique These
by
the
grain
boundary
grooving
for the same surface orientation. results+*)
temperatures
and t,he spread of his results increased. Specimens heated at 720°C in oxygen at 1O-3 torr showed no great increase in groove widths over t,hose measured * Received
from thermal grooving. The same authorsc5) have used a tracer technique to determine the D, for CuG8
indicate that in hydrogen for above 0.73 T,, t-he melting temperature,
Qs, is 4 to 8 of AHs,,, the heat of sublimat.ion. Below this temperature surface contamination stopped the diffusion process. However it is relevant that Inman et a1.(7) in their experiments on the creep of copper wires found
that their copper in hydrogen
at 950°C
would not change shape under surface energy forces 1057
1058
ACTA
alone
even though
mass-transfer
was occurring
means of the less surface-sensitive process.
volume
by
not
affected
by
even where measurable
impurities.
Earlier Menzel@) at the disappearance of etch
had shown, by looking
pits in copper surfaces during annealing, that changing the environment Although
altered
the surface
he could not obtain
diffusion
an absolute
rate.
value for
D,$, he found that between 650°C and the melting point in a vacuum
of 3 x 10e4 torr, Q, was 13 kcal/mole In air at 2 x 1O-3 torr D,
(i.e. Q, = 0.16 AH,,,). was greater hydrogen
by a factor
were variable,
of 2 to 3.
His results in
the end state after annealing
depending on temperature, obvious
why
the more
recent
work
should give values of Qs/AHsub so much higher than Menzrl’s. have
More
found
platinum T,.
low
in
recently, values
the
Blakely for
and
Qs/AHsuh
temperature
Mykuratg)
(=0.21)
range
for
0.57?‘,-0.78
Because of this and because of the indications
impurity
effects in hydrogen
of D, on the oxygen measure
the
transfer
method
principally
self-diffusion in
(Po2), we decided to
of copper
different
the grain
of
and of the dependence
pressures
by the mass-
environments
boundary
grooving
using
technique
and to a lesser extent scratch smoothing. 2.
The
principles
boundary
grooving
are,
briefly, as follows. If a polycrystalline piece of copper with flat surfaces is annealed, grooves are developed at the intersection surfaces;
of the grain boundaries
face.
with the
this is the result of local equilibrium
set up between the grain boundary The
volume
grooves
diffusion
metal atoms. diffusion,
can form
surface
diffusion,
and condensation
If the mechanism
then a “hill”
the groove.
being
and the free sur-
by
or evaporation
of
is surface or volume
is developed
If the mechanism
on each side of
is surface
diffusion
and w:: is the width between the top of the “hills”
then
Mullins has shownoO) that (1)
where B = D,vQ2 y,lkT D, = surface self-diffusion
coefficient ( cm2 se&)
v = surface density of atoms (cm-2) Q = atomic volume k = Boltzmann’s
constant (“K)
t = time of anneal (set).
process’ll)
the width
20, = 5.0 (A#
(2)
and
D, = volume diffusion coefficient.
In practice,
thermal
and surface
diffusion
volume
diffusion
mentally
grooving
contribution
measured
can occur
simultaneously. width
by volume
Provided
is small,
the
the experi-
can be corrected
to that
which would have occurred by surface diffusion alone, using the procedure given by Mullins and Shewmon.(l) This method was adopted at the higher temperatures, when necessary, quoted
using the volume
diffusion
results
by Le Claireu2) i.e.
D, = 0.62 exp [-49.56 In all our experiments, and condensation
(kcal)/RT]
cm2 set-l.
mass-transfer
by evaporation
can easily be shown to be negligible
and is not considered
further.
The essence of the scratch smoothing if a scratch consisting
method is that
of a depression
with a mound
on each side is made in the surface of a metal, and the metal
is heated,
the scratch
broaden with time. that
if smoothing
width-time
will smooth
out
and
King and Mullins(i3) have shown is by surface
dependence w24 -
diffusion
then the
is WI4 = (6.90)4 Bt
(3)
where wi and tu2 are the initial and final widths of the Similarly if smootjhing is by volume diffusion :
w2 3 - ~113 = (6.22)3 At. (4) This method lends itself to a study of the orientation dependence
of D,.
Although
grain boundary
can be used for this it involves
growing
grooving bicrystals.
The remelting involved
could lead to impurity pick-up
and
simpler
in our
case the
scratch
chosen.
It is necessary
liminary
anneal after scratching
the deformed
method
to give the specimen
was a pre-
in order to replace
region near the scratch
with a single
crystal and to smooth out the small scale irregularities in the profile. ing scratches
The orientations were found
of the grains contain-
using (111) surface traces,
i.e. slip lines and annealing
twins,
present,
microhardness
produce
(111) slip traces.
as described
by
twin traces were
indentations
were made
to
In both methods, depth rather than width measurements can be used but we found it more reliable to use the latter.
(cm-3)
ys = surface free energy (erg cm-2) T = temperature
diffusion
Takeuchi et aZ.(14) When insufficient
II), = 4.6 (Bt)* and
1964
where A = ys ClD,jkT
scratch.
METHOD
of grain
12,
Similarly for a volume
with no diffusion occurring
below 700°C. It was not
VOL.
diffusion
With such impurity effects it is difficult to be
certain that surface diffusion is
SIETALLURGICA,
(erg deg-l)
All mass-transfer methods need a knowledge of ys to obtain D,. In this work we have used Udin et aZ.‘s(15) value
of ys as determined
ys = 2445 - 0.5875 T ergs/cm2. The of ys on environment is discussed later.
in vacua i.e. dependence The surface
BRADSHAW,
density
BRANDON
WHEELER:
AND
of atoms is taken to be simply P”.
That is,
that
D, is a mean ~oe~~ient
surface atoms even if mass-transfer ring by means of a small fraction
by Johnson,
and maximum
environments
with increasing values of PO,. For all ex-
is actually Occur-
periments
; (e) and (f) low pressure
except those in (d) the same apparatus was
used with small modifications.
It consisted of a grease-
free glass system which enclosed the boat containing the specimens; copper
and Co. Ltd.
supplied
During
anneals
it was connected through a liquid nitro-
gen trap to a silicone oil diffusion pump. The specimens were placed breaking
in a silica
end
tube
A furnace
face to face but not touching,
anneals. Dealing with the environments
in a boat with a loosely
fitting lid made from the same material. the
specimens
purit,y yet permit Changes
ready
with
access
The aim was
copper
of similar
to the atmosphere.
in surface profiles were measured
IIilger and Watts interference photographic
methods
microscope
or a micrometer
with a
using either eyepiece.
surfaces
were
mechanically
finishing with rouge and then chemically
polished,
polished in a
solution consisting of 55 ‘A by volume orthophosphoric acid (density nitric
acid
1.75 gm/cc), (densit’y
~lectropolished (density
25 % acetic acid and 20 %
1.4 gm/cc).
in a bath
1.38
gm/cc)
Mullins and Shewmon(l)
washed
in 107:
(density dueo”)),
were
procedures
then acid
similar
(the cell potential
until the grain boundaries in t#he interference
They
of orthophosphoric
using
to
was 1 V)
were smooth when viewed They were finally
microscope.
by volume
1.75 gm/cc)
of orthophosphori~
(to minimise
acid
phosphate
resi-
distilled water and “Analar” aeetone. anneals, for 34 hr at approximately
Preliminary
lOOO”C, were carried out in an atmosphere that used in the subsequent
grooving
to stab&se the grain boundaries to permit purities.
surface
segregation
The specimens
and then annealed
similar to
anneal in order
in the specimen of any
internal
were electro-polished
in one of the following
and im-
again environ-
ments: (a) hydrogen
g760
(b) hydrogen
~5
(e) vacuum (d) vacuum
tube
during
in order.
of 99.9 7; purity (impurities 0, ~500
p.p.m.:
N,
p.p.m.)
was passed through
~500
p.p.m.,
carbon
compounds
two platinised
~20
asbestos
perchlorate oxygen-removing units, a magnesium drier and a liquid nitrogen trap. It was then led into aperture in the copper to silicon monoxide
boat.
most
of our work
alumina
the
of gas
evacuation
at one atmosphere operating.
occur anneal
polishing
at
experiments apparatus widths.
failed to
it, was then necessary 1000°C
and
then
analysis appropriately.
to
by a short
at the lower temperatures,
ing the mathematical
uithexperi-
pressure
Grooving
anneal in vacua followed
hydrogen
in
without
fmther
at atmospheric
difference.
in some specimens;
give a preliminary
was maintained
However,
hydrogen
showed no significant
to
After a of the system a steady flow
of hydrogen
in static
the
~otltamination.
preliminary
ments
temperatures,
was used (in this case only)
risk
out the pumps
at one atmosphere
near 1000°cl and although
at lower
was
feed tube
minimise
The r~d~~ctiorl of silica
in hydrogen
is possible at temperatures
reanneal correctIn some
the specimens were wit#hdrawn from the after the 1000°C anneal to check groove
This did not appear to affect the results and
we conclude
that the 1OOO’C anneal was helping to
remove impurities left by polishing.
~5
was t~rap
x 10m5torr. (c) The vacuum
by simple
x 1OW torr
(e) water va~ourlhydro~en with Prro ~3.6 torr, PN, -7 X lop5 torr (f) oxygen ~5
the silica
directly into the pumped system to give a pressure of
1O-5 torr
~81 X 1O-7 torr ~1
(a) Hydrogen
over
and
were used.
(b) Hydrogen, cIeaned and dried as above, led via a controllable leak and liquid nitrogen
torr x
was drawn
making
seals
the apparatus via an alumina tube right up to a small
3. I Ci?Yzin~~ou.~~~~;r~ ~~o~v~~~~~ Specimen
by
a glass seal, i.e. no organic
these were suspended, with the surfaces to be measured
to surround
opportunity
This also
of them.
Standardised”
Matthey
1059
Cu
for all of the
I.5 cm by 0.5 cm by 0.05 cm were
‘~S~eetrogr~~phically
contamination
IN
volatilization
3. EXPERIMENTAL The specimens,
impurity
SELF-DIFFUSION
for impurity
12, is based on an average surface density. implies
SURFACE
at temperatures x 10-B
X 1O-5 torr.
Environments (a) and (b) were aimed at providing low values of PO, ; (c) and (d) the minimum gas
of ~1
pumping
x 1O-i torr was provided
alone.
below
Grooving
500°C
unless,
atmospheric hydrogen experimenm, anneal was given in* vacua at 1000°C; in removing the inhibiting factor.
did not occur as with
the
a preliminary t’his succeeded
(d) The vacuum of ~1 x 10-s torr was produced in another glass apparatus. This included improved pumping,
two liquid
nitrogen
traps in series and a,
ACTA
METALLURGIC.4,
specimens.
These were
1060
gold wire seal for introducing driven
into
the
silica
end-tube
surrounded
furnace by means of a magnetically
by
a
operated push rod.
VOL.
12,
1964 4. RESULTS
4.1. Grain boundary grooving The
results
obtained
from
the
boundary
grooving
the specimens were heated. The whole apparatus, with specimens inside but not in the furnace, was
showed the largest scatter.
pre-baked
the limits between which the results lay and each point
initially
to
pressures of ~10-~
-400°C.
torr.
This
resulted
in
method are summarised
grain
In this way the minimum material was outgassed when
The results in hydrogen
in Figs 1. and 2.
at atmospheric
pressure
The vertical bars represent
is the mean, on average, of 5 results. The t* dependence
The pressure rose to -lo-’
torr when the specimens were driven into the furnace
of groove width was checked down to 700°C.
but rapidly fell again t$o -10-s
torr, the average for
600°C grooving
the run. (e) A
distilled
connected
filled
with
to the apparatus
surrounded -lo-’
round
was
in (b) and
After evacuation
to
x 10e5 torr.
The liquid
the side arm was then replaced
solid CO, in acetone;
by
this gave a low pressure
en-
with PHzOIPH, of 5.111.
vironment
(f) Oxygen H, < 50
of 99.5 % purity
p.p.m.,
carbon
hydrogen
the
<20
argon?
value
at atmospheric
ceased at 550°C.
a single boundary,
with some evidence
was responsible
which occurred. environments hydrogen
used.
Further,
at atmospheric
pressure separate measure-
present
the water in a section of the
The measurements
somewhat average,
of 3 results.
each point
The tf dependence
(this
vapour pressure after the liquid nitrogen surround~g
at 700°C.
would
present in the hydrogen
be converted
copper some
oxygen,
into
and subsequently scatter
water
vapour
detected.
in the water
vapour
initially,
by the hot
upper limit for PE,o/FH,
specimens
down to 500°C.
or given no further
scratched an L.P.
with a modified record
diamond
tip radius of -12p. anneal
in a vacuum
polished and electro-
polishing,
microhardness
cleaned
and
tester using
stylus which had a special
They were then given the initial of lo-’
torr at 1000°C to re-
crystallise t~~roughout the scratch and to smooth out small scale irregularities in the profile. measurements of
scratch
subsequent
widths
were
made
before
and
after
a
anneal in vacuum ; some measurements
were also made using one atmosphere both anneals.
of hydrogen
After the preliminary
ture anneal for experiments
below
for
high tempera-
5OO”C, grooving
persisted to the limits of measurement.
polished
PEzo/P,
then
the tf dependence of grooving was confirmed
readings;
was found to be XO-4.
as before, then either chemically polished
an over-estimate)
This implies a PO2 of <1O-25 atm!
coherent and reliable with well-formed Each point is the mean, on average, of 3
but no
were mechanically
we assume that all the
grooves.
showed The
did
If, in estimat-
Results is vaaezrowere, by com~)arison with those in hydrogen,
Results
3.2 Scratch smoothing Cold-rolled
is certainly
fraction
significant, change after passing over the copper.
below 500°C.
on
of groove
down to 750°C and grooving
ing Pcjz for this environment,
would be <10m2.
that any
showed
is the mean,
residual pressure under vacuum is due to water vapour
flow line with liquid nitrogen, pumping out the section,
untrapped
Here after
of water vapour
in low pressure hydrogen
less scatter,
sealing off and using a Pirani gauge to read the water It was considered
pressure (at 650°C) did we
45 hr it ceased.
width was checked
the t.rap was removed.
in the other
only once and then in
not to progress steadily.
The observations
of PO2 for the runs in
pressure of the water vapour
of the grooving
observe grooving
not occur at temperatures
by trapping
for most
along
that volume
was not observed
This
and after pa,ssing over the heated specimen. The partial
above,
at low tem-
peratures variable groove widths were observed
men& were made of the water content of the gas before
was found
Typically,
content implied that at 700°C the PO2 was m1O-2s atm.
p.p.m.)
a8 in (b).
was dried and introduced determine
(main impurity
compounds
effectively
diffusion
was opened to the hydrogen
torr the apparatus
nitrogen
water
as described
wit.h liquid nitrogen.
leak to give a pressure of ~7
To
anneal as described
use of a short preliminary side-arm
Below
became very variable and despite the
Estimating
an
effective Paz for the vacuum environments
is difficult.
Equilibrium
not estab-
lished. not
with the copper
However,
oxidised
is probably
it was observed that the copper was
at 7OO”C, so,
using
Richardson
Jeffesces’17) data, PO2 wa,s less than IV1
and
at,m.
The wet hydrogen point is the mean of two virtually identical results. The value of Paz of this environment at 700°C is lo-l9 atim. The results in low pressure oxygen more scatter;
the vertical
agai:l showed
bars cover extreme
read-
ings, the points are the mean, on average, of four observations. Oxidation was probably responsible for some of the variability. at the grain which,
boundaries
Oxide formed preferentially giving
if seen, were rejected.
anomalous
However,
profiles
some of the
6-
,4 -
\!\ \
\\‘\
HYDROGEN
A
8
HYDROGEN
+
9 FIG. 1
:
(
9
0
\
II FIG. 2
104/T”K
Tcrr
_.
4,
k Tom
IO
P-5xlC?lorr
P-IO-’
P-IO-’
\
I
.
I
600 5(
TEMP ‘C 7‘00
FIGS. 1 and 2. The surface self-diffusion of copper in different environments.
8
x
IO-‘Torr I2
OXYGEN
0
Torr
=760 II
VACUUM VACUUM
0
Torr
El
0.
.
, 890
F \g )
\I
900
’ P"zo/P"z =5.1
0
4
P
1001
=760
IO 4/T”K
IO
PH* P-5x
pHZ
I
n t
5(
I *. I
600
c
:
PHz -7 6(
, 700
TEMP ‘C
9?0
AND SHEWMON
\
\8“ \ \t \’
‘\
900
___GJOSTEIN
---CHOI
+
‘\
---
1000
I2
13
\ 0
a
ACTA
1062
METALLURGICA,
readings may have been slightly affected by
accepted
The t* dependence of grooving was confirmed over
this.
the whole temperature
range.
faces and this was attributed at,mospheres on a few
etching
crystals,
to oxidation.
rarely occurred, so that
In other
and then only
it could
at,tributed to contamination. Summarising, the t* dependence was confirmed
reasonably
of groove
be
width
in all cases where checks were made,
except at low temperatures in hydrogen at 1 atm. The straight line portions of the Arrhenius plots could be tabulated _~
thus: Q,
D,(cm2 set-1)
PIY?SSUIY 560 torr NT, x 10-S tom -1 x lo-‘t’orr -5 x 10-b tom
Hydrogen Hydrogen VWUUrn Oxygen ______
method
1 7 3 2
x x x x
22 19 17 18
10-l 10-Z 10-Z 10-l
was
only
used
with
and vacuum
The results in hydrogen
hydrogen
at at
at 700°C gave a low between
vacua
showed
no correlation
D,
and surface orientation.
D, seemed more dependent
on the particular anneal;
some gave all high and some
all low values.
If a scratch
was drawn through
of different orientations,
t,here was no marked
all
and then annealed,
change in smoothing
rate from
grain to grain.
In general the results obtained by this
method
less reliable
were
boundary
grooving.
than
Perhaps
not electropolish
those
from
grain
this was because
the specimen
one
after the pre-
liminary anneal and thus remove any impurities which might have segregated to the surface. X-ray
orientation
pronounced (by
measurements
showed
a fairly
texture of (110) planes lying in the sur-
However, the (1 ll}
was measured
of 0, that
a stereographic trace
method)
plot of orientations of crystals
by scratch smoothing
whose
D,
showed a fairly
broad spread from the (110) pole up to (112). Planes not effectively covered were those round the (001) and (111). 5.
DISCUSSION
Oxygen is readily adsorbed on the surface of copper. If adsorption is in the form of a monolayer of oxygen atoms, the reaction is, 0, + 2 cu = 2(Cu-0)
and AS == -30 adsorption
cal/mol/deg.
should
take
place
rogen and in wet hydrogen at 700°C should have been oxygen.
we do not know whether to have should
mation
Calculations
for the other
used show that this should still be so. oxygen
environments:
been
long enough
surface
environments
Qs]
(tl > 4) for Paz > lo-l8 atm. at 700°C. Referring to the estimates of Po2, this implies that the copper surface in hydrogen at 1 atm., in low pressure hyd-
Given
Results
face.
kcal/mole indicates
certain
measurable.
could
-110 This
Gjostein,
pressure
In [82/Po2(1 -
coverage and PO is the oxygen pressure in atmospheres. Using the same data as Gjostein,(2) AH =
sorbed in the vacuum
value for U, which was not accurately in
T A5’ = -RT
where AG, AH and A# are the free energy, enthalpy and entropy of adsorption, 8 is the fractional surface
Whereas
(kcal/mole)
smoothing
atmospheric
crystals
represents an oxygen atom on a surface
Then
calculating
Scratch
700°C.
site.
temperatures
Atmosl~her~~
This
where (Cu-0)
1964
free of adsorbed
__~
4.2
12,
AG = AH -
after annealing in oxygen ( PO2 ~10~’ was observed on some specimen sur-
As expected, atm.), etching
VOL.
in the low pressure
in this environment
have
been
adsorption
was ad-
it was virtually
covered
oxygen.
the whole
with
Cu,O.
AS as being equal to the entropy of Cu,O,
but for a mobile
could be appreciably Shewmon(is)
near
environment
{ill},
of forlayer it
Robertson
and
that for a copper
surface
Po2
of the
increasing
the
beyond a certain level causes changes in
the torque term (i.e. the variation with orientation). is responsible at 1000°C.
adsorbed
less than this.
have shown
orientation
In
pressures we have taken, with
Assuming
we deduce
of surface energy
that adsorbed
that AG = -97
Taking as before, AH = -110
A&’ becomes
-10
cal/mole/deg.
This
characteristic
pressure, for the formation
oxygen
kcal/mole kcal/mole leads
to
a
of a mono-
layer, of 1O-23 atm. at 700°C and one should now expect
adsorption
of
oxygen
in the
wet
hydrogen
environment’. However,
regardless of this WC have (a) that where
diffusion
occurred
pressure
hydrogen,
agree within even between lo-’
the values of D, obtained in wet hydrogen
the accuracy
in low
and ilr, uacuo
of measurement
and (b)
the whole range of PO, from lo-30 to
atm. D, only changed by a factor of 7 at 700°C.
The Gibbs formula for dependence of surface energy on gas pressure, where adsorption is occurring, is Po2(dy/dPo2)
= --r
kT
where r is the number of molecules adsorbed/ems. From this one would expect, when 8 LY I, a reduction in ys of -300 erg/cm2 for every tenfold increase in pressure. As we have not so far allowed for this we might expect an apparent increasing Paz, but we have effect.
reduction
in D, with
observed
the reverse
13RADSHAW, 6.
BRANDON
SURFACE
and our few
SELF-DIFFUSION
IS
Cu
1063
ACKNOWLEDGMENTS
CONCLUSIONS
At high temperatures gether
WHEELER:
AND
all results tend to come to-
observations
agree reasonably
We
wish to thank J. N. Eastabrook
orientation
measurements
for the X-ray
and also N. J. Wadsworth
well with previous ones. At lower temperatures (i.e. < 900%) in all environments there seems to be
and D. M. Gilbey for their helpful discussions.
clear evidence
1. W. W. MULLINS and P. G. SHEWBIOX, Act<& ,%fet. 7, 163 (1959). 2. N. A. GJOSTEIN, Trains. A.Z.M.E. 221, 1039 (1961). 3. J. Y. CHOI and P. G. SHEWMON, Trans. A.Z.M.b’. 224, 589 (1962). 4. P. G. SHEWMON and J. Y. CHOI, to be published. 5. J. Y. CHOI and P. G. SHEWMON, to be published. 6. N. A. GJOSTEIN, to be published in Proceedings of BSMAIME Symposium, Surfuces: Structure, Energetics and Kinetics, held in New York in October 1962. 7. M. C. INMAN, D. MCLEAN and H. R. TIPLEK, Proc. Roy. Sot. A2*93, 538 (1963). 8. E. MENZEL, 2. Physik 132, 508 (1952). 9. J. M. BLAKELY and H. MYKURA, Acta Net. 10, 565 (1962). 10. W. W. MULLINS, J. Appl. Phys. 28, 333 (1957). 11. W. W. MULLINS, [I’rans. A.Z.M.E. 218, 354 (1960). 12. A. D. LE CLAIRE, Phil. Mag. 7, 141 (1962). 13. R. T. KING and W. W. MULLINS. Actu Met. 10.601 (19621. 14. S. TAKEUCHI, T. HONMA and S.‘IKEDA, S”ci~-~e~. !bohok’u Univ. 11,81 (1959). 15. H. CUIN, &fetal Interfaces, p. 114. Amer. Sot. Metals (1951). 16. tip.A.‘JA~QUET and M. JEAN, Rev. M&. 48, 537 (1951). 17. F. D. RICHARDSON and J. H. E. JEFFES, J. Iron. St. Inst. 160, 261 (1948). 18. W. M. ROBERTSON and P. G. SHEWMON, J. Chem. Phys. 39, 2330 (1963).
of a lower activation
(i.e. Q, RS 0.2 AH&. at the
lowest
surface
Diffusion
temperatures
contamination.
agreement hydrogen
energy
process
in VICCUO proceeded
and
showed
Because
of
the least
this
and
the
between results in vacua and low pressure one might suggest that this is characteristic
of clean copper, but because of uncertainties adsorption
and the possibility
the evidence
is not
of other
conclusive.
in oxygen impurities,
Increasing
oxygen
partial pressure increases surface diffusion under these conditions.
Limited experiments
showed no marked dependence 7OO”C, though come
moro
on orientation
at lower temperatures
important.
derived to account
Theoretical
this could models
at be-
can be
for both large and small values of
Q, and D, but discussion
of these is of limited value
unt’il a clearer idea of conditions obtained.
effects
of D, on orientation
at the surface
is
REFERENCES