Lomer–Cottrell junction

In materials science, a Lomer–Cottrell junction is a particular configuration of dislocations.

When two perfect dislocations encounter along a slip plane, each perfect dislocation can split into two Shockley partial dislocations: a leading dislocation and a trailing dislocation. When the two leading Shockley partials combine, they form a separate dislocation with a burgers vector that is not in the slip plane. This is the Lomer–Cottrell dislocation. It is sessile and immobile in the slip plane, acting as a barrier against other dislocations in the plane. The trailing dislocations pile up behind the Lomer–Cottrell dislocation, and an ever greater force is required to push additional dislocations into the pile-up.

ex. FCC lattice along {111} slip planes

             |leading| |trailing|
a 2 [ 0 1 1 ] a 6 [ 1 1 2 ] + a 6 [ -1 2 1 ] {\displaystyle {\frac {a}{2}}[{\text{0 1 1}}]\rightarrow {\frac {a}{6}}[{\text{1 1 2}}]+{\frac {a}{6}}[{\text{-1 2 1}}]}
a 2 [ 1 0 -1 ] a 6 [ 1 1 -2 ] + a 6 [ 2 -1 -1 ] {\displaystyle {\frac {a}{2}}[{\text{1 0 -1}}]\rightarrow {\frac {a}{6}}[{\text{1 1 -2}}]+{\frac {a}{6}}[{\text{2 -1 -1}}]}

Combination of leading dislocations:

a 6 [ 1 1 2 ] + a 6 [ 1 1 -2 ] a 3 [ 1 1 0 ] {\displaystyle {\frac {a}{6}}[{\text{1 1 2}}]+{\frac {a}{6}}[{\text{1 1 -2}}]\rightarrow {\frac {a}{3}}[{\text{1 1 0}}]}

The resulting dislocation is along the crystal face, which is not a slip plane in FCC at room temperature.

Lomer–Cottrell dislocation

References


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