| Literature DB >> 25399835 |
H L Hong1, Q Wang2, C Dong3, Peter K Liaw4.
Abstract
Metallic alloys show complex chemistries that are not yet understood so far. It has been widely accepted that behind the composition selection lies a short-range-order mechanism for solid solutions. The present paper addresses this fundamental question by examining the face-centered-cubic Cu-Zn α-brasses. A new structural approach, the cluster-plus-glue-atom model, is introduced, which suits specifically for the description of short-range-order structures in disordered systems. Two types of formulas are pointed out, [Zn-Cu12]Zn(1~6) and [Zn-Cu12](Zn,Cu)6, which explain the α-brasses listed in the American Society for Testing and Materials (ASTM) specifications. In these formulas, the bracketed parts represent the 1(st)-neighbor cluster, and each cluster is matched with one to six 2nd-neighbor Zn atoms or with six mixed (Zn,Cu) atoms. Such a cluster-based formulism describes the 1st- and 2nd-neighbor local atomic units where the solute and solvent interactions are ideally satisfied. The Cu-Ni industrial alloys are also explained, thus proving the universality of the cluster-formula approach in understanding the alloy selections. The revelation of the composition formulas for the Cu-(Zn,Ni) industrial alloys points to the common existence of simple composition rules behind seemingly complex chemistries of industrial alloys, thus offering a fundamental and practical method towards composition interpretations of all kinds of alloys.Entities:
Year: 2014 PMID: 25399835 PMCID: PMC4233332 DOI: 10.1038/srep07065
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Sci Rep ISSN: 2045-2322 Impact factor: 4.379
Figure 1Structure of a Cu3Zn ordered state.
The 1st and 2nd nearest-neighbor configurations of a possible low-temperature ordered Cu3Zn state with the AuCu3-structure type, where the twelve 1st neighbors are occupied by Cu and the six 2nd neighbors by Zn.
Figure 2A two-dimensional solid-solution structure.
Schematic diagram showing the distribution of solute atoms (yellow circles) in a square lattice of solvent atoms (light red circles). The major part of this structure can be represented by a local structural unit, formulated as [solute1-solvent4]solute1, which covers only the 1st-neighbors [solute1-solvent4] cluster (marked with a large blue circle) and one 2nd-neighbor solute as the glue atom (linked to the cluster center by a blue line segment).
Typical Cu-Zn α-brass industrial alloys in ASTM specifications9 and their composition interpretations in terms of the cluster formulas
| Specifications (wt.%) | Names | Cluster formula (wt.%) | Type |
|---|---|---|---|
| C21000 (95Cu-5Zn) | Gilding metal | [Zn-Cu12]Cu6 (94.6Cu-5.4Zn) | (2) |
| C22000 (90Cu-10Zn) | Commercial bronze | [Zn-Cu12]Cu5Zn1 (89.2Cu-10.8Zn) | |
| C22600 (87.5Cu-12.5Zn) | Jewelry bronze | - | |
| C23000 (85Cu-15Zn) | Red brass | [Zn1-Cu12]Zn1 (85.4Cu-14.6Zn) | (1) |
| C24000 (80Cu-20Zn) | Low brass | [Zn-Cu12]Zn2 (79.6Cu-20.4Zn) | |
| Cu3Zn | - | [Zn-Cu12]Zn3 (Cu74.5-25.5Zn) | |
| C26000 (70Cu-30Zn) | Cartridge brass | [Zn-Cu12]Zn4 (Cu70.0-70.0Zn) | |
| C26800 (65Cu-35Zn, previously 66Cu-34Zn) | Yellow brass | [Zn-Cu12]Zn5 (66.0Cu-34.0Zn) | |
| C27000 (65Cu-35Zn) | Yellow brass | [Zn-Cu12]Zn5 (66.0Cu-34.0Zn) | |
| C27400 (63Cu-37Zn) | Common brass | [Zn-Cu12]Zn6 (62.5Cu-37.5Zn) | |
| C28000 (60Cu-40Zn) | Muntz metal | - |