| Literature DB >> 29180772 |
Lianfeng Zou1, Chaoming Yang2, Yinkai Lei3, Dmitri Zakharov4, Jörg M K Wiezorek3, Dong Su4, Qiyue Yin1, Jonathan Li5, Zhenyu Liu3, Eric A Stach4, Judith C Yang6, Liang Qi2, Guofeng Wang3, Guangwen Zhou1.
Abstract
Surface segregation-the enrichment of one element at the surface, relative to the bulk-is ubiquitous to multi-component materials. Using the example of a Cu-Au solid solution, we demonstrate that compositional variations induced by surface segregation are accompanied by misfit strain and the formation of dislocations in the subsurface region via a surface diffusion and trapping process. The resulting chemically ordered surface regions acts as an effective barrier that inhibits subsequent dislocation annihilation at free surfaces. Using dynamic, atomic-scale resolution electron microscopy observations and theory modelling, we show that the dislocations are highly active, and we delineate the specific atomic-scale mechanisms associated with their nucleation, glide, climb, and annihilation at elevated temperatures. These observations provide mechanistic detail of how dislocations nucleate and migrate at heterointerfaces in dissimilar-material systems.Entities:
Year: 2017 PMID: 29180772 DOI: 10.1038/nmat5034
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Nat Mater ISSN: 1476-1122 Impact factor: 43.841