Article ID | Journal | Published Year | Pages | File Type |
---|---|---|---|---|
7971000 | Materials Characterization | 2013 | 30 Pages |
Abstract
Thermal etching is a method which is able to reveal and characterize grain boundaries, twins or dislocation structures and determine parameters such as grain boundary energies, surface diffusivities or study phase transformations in steels, intermetallics or ceramic materials. This method relies on the preferential transfer of matter away from grain boundaries on a polished sample during heating at high temperatures in an inert/vacuum atmosphere. The evaporation/diffusion of atoms at high temperatures results in the formation of grooves at the intersections of the planes of grain/twin boundaries with the polished surface. This work describes how the combined use of Focussed Ion Beam and Transmission Electron Microscopy can be used to characterize not only the grooves and their profile with the surface, but also the grain boundary line below the groove, this method being complementary to the commonly used scanning probe techniques.
Related Topics
Physical Sciences and Engineering
Materials Science
Materials Science (General)
Authors
Y. Palizdar, D. San Martin, M. Ward, R.C. Cochrane, R. Brydson, A.J. Scott,