Lecture2 Diffusion IN SOLIDS
Lecture2 Diffusion IN SOLIDS
DIFFUSION IN SOLIDS
ISSUES TO ADDRESS...
Atomic mechanisms of diffusion Mathematics of diffusion Influence of temperature and diffusing species on Diffusion rate
Courtesy of P. Alpay
DIFFUSION
Phenomenon of material transport by atomic or particle transport from region of high to low concentration
What forces the particles to go from left to right? Does each particle know its local concentration? Every particle is equally likely to go left or right! At the interfaces in the above picture, there are more particles going right than left this causes an average flux of particles to the right! Largely determined by probability & statistics
Courtesy of P. Alpay
DIFFUSION DEMO
Glass tube filled with water. At time t = 0, add some drops of ink to one end of the tube. Measure the diffusion distance, x, over some time.
to t1 t2 t3 xo x1 x2 x3
x (mm)
time (s)
Courtesy of P. Alpay
Courtesy of P. Alpay
silicon
2. Heat it. 3. Result: Doped semiconductor regions.
light regions: Si atoms
Fig. 18.0, Callister 6e.
silicon
Courtesy of P. Alpay
Temperature
coarsening
Ceramic Sintering
Sintering mechanisms
C A D B
B*: self diffusion mobility
C A B D
Tracer atom studies may not give the true self-diffusion coefficient, Di*
(12.6)
100% 0
Cu
Ni
Concentration Profiles
Courtesy of P. Alpay
If the concentration of component A is given in mass units, the rate equation for diffusion is:
(12.1) WAx: mass flux of A in the x-direction, kg (of A) m-2s-1 A: mass concentration of A, kg (of A) m-3 (of total material) DA: diffusion coefficient, or diffusivity of A, m2s-1 (intrinsic diffusion coefficient)
In the materials field, the rate equation is usually written in terms of molar concentrations:
(12.2) jAx: molar flux of A in the x-direction, mol (of A) m-2s-1 CA: molar concentration of A, mol (of A) m-3 (of total material)
Fick s first law of diffusion states that species A diffuses in the direction of decreasing concentration of A, similarly as heat flows by conduction in the direction of decreasing temperature, and momentum is transferred in viscous flow in the direction of decreasing velocity. Eq. (12.1) and (12.2) are convenient forms of the rate equation when the density of the total solution is uniform (in solid or liquid solutions, or in dilute gaseous mixture). When the density is not uniform:
: density of the entire solution, kg/m-3 A*: mass fraction of A (12.3)
C: local molar concentration in the solution at the point where the gradient is measured
(12.4)
Self diffusion data apply to homogenous alloys in which there is no gradient in chemical composition.
DIFFUSION IN SOLIDS
2. Diffusion under the influence of a composition gradient
Flux of gold atoms (according to an observer sitting on a plane moving with the solids velocity):
Total flux of gold atoms (according to an observer sitting on an unattached plane in space):
(12.7)
(12.8)
(12.9)
(12.10)
If the vacancy concentration within the unit volume is constant, then the volume is approximately constant and:
(12.12)
(12.13)
D indicates that the flux is proportional to the concentration gradient but side-steps the issue of bulk flow. The accumulation of gold within the unit volume:
(12.17)
The unsteady-state equation for unidirectional diffusion in solids (Ficks second law):
(12.18)
(12.19)
DAu and DNi: Intrinsic diffusion coefficients D : Interdiffusion, mutual diffusion, or chemical diffusion
DIFFUSION IN SOLIDS
3. Darkens equation
(12.20)
nAx: flux of A atoms passing through an unit area in the x-direction nA: the number of A atoms per unit volume BA: mobility of A atoms in the presence of the energy gradient N _ 0: Avogadros number GA: partial molar free energy of A (chemical potential of A)
(12.21)
NERNST-EINSTEIN EQUATION
And only if BA = BA* and BB = BB*, then Eq. (12.19) can be written as:
(12.25)
(12.26)
DIFFUSION IN SOLIDS
4. Temperature dependence of diffusion in solids
(12.27)
(Arrhenius equation)
According to Zener, if the jump process is an activated one, jump frequency can be described by:
(12.28) 0= vibrational frequency of the atom in the lattice Z = coordination number
G: = free energy of activation required for the atom to jump from one site into the next
(12.29)
Sherby and Simnad developed a correlation equation for predicting selfdiffusion data in pure metals:
(12.30) K0 depends only on the crystal structure V = normal valence of the metal TM = absolute melting point D0 is approximated as 1 10-4 m2 s-1 for estimation purposes
(12.31)
The general equation for the transport of the species in the x-direction under the influence of an electric field and a concentration gradient in the x-direction:
(12.32)
(12.35)
(12.37)
(12.38)
For NaCl:
(12.40)
For CoO:
(12.41)
(12.42)
(12.43)
A is a constant M = atomic weight or molecular weight TM = melting point D* = self-diffusion coefficient VM = molar (or atomic) volume If it is assumed that the atoms in the liquid are in a cubic array, then for materials generally the simple theory predicts that:
(12.44)
Hole theory: This theory presumes the existence of holes or vacancies randomly distributed throughout the liquid and providing ready diffusion paths for atoms and ions. The concentration of these holes would have to be very great in order to account for the volume increase upon melting, thus resulting in much higher diffusion rates in liquids than in solids just below the melting point. Eyring theory: If the liquid is considered quasi-crystalline, and the atoms are in a cubic configuration, then an expression relating D* and results:
(12.45)
Fluctuation theory: In this theory, the extra volume (over that of the solid) in the liquid is distributed evenly throughout the liquid, making the average nearest neighbour distance increase.
(12.47)
DIFFUSION IN GASES
Based on the kinetic theory of gases, self-diffusivity of spherical A atoms diffusing in pure A can be predicted by:
(12.48)
For the diffusivity of two unequal size spherical atoms A and B, kinetic theory predicts:
(12.49)
where A = 1.06036, B = 0.15610, C = 0.19300, D = 0.47635, E = 1.03587, F = 1.52996, G = 1.76474, and H = 3.89411.
(12.52)
(12.53)
(12.54)
Tortuosity is a number greater than one and it ranges from values of 1.5 -2.0 for unconsolidated particles, to as high as 7 or 8 for compacted particles. An analysis of the flow of molecules through a cylindirical pore radius r under a concentration gradient yields
(12.56)
If r and are of the same order of magnitude, or if the pore diameter is only one order larger, then Knudsen diffusion is presumably important.
If the ratio DAB/DK is small, then the ordinary diffusion is the rate determinig step. Conversely, if DAB/DK is large, it is presumed that Knudsen diffusion controls.
(12.57)