Pore distributions in nanocrystalline metals from small-angle neutron scattering
β Scribed by P.G. Sanders; J.A. Eastman; J.R. Weertman
- Publisher
- Elsevier Science
- Year
- 1998
- Tongue
- English
- Weight
- 761 KB
- Volume
- 46
- Category
- Article
- ISSN
- 1359-6454
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β¦ Synopsis
AbstractΓRecent upgrades in inert-gas condensation processing equipment have produced nanocrystalline metal samples with high densities and low-impurity levels. Typical Cu and Pd samples have densities r98% of theoretical and oxygen and hydrogen impurity concentrations 0.5 at.%. Lower porosity and impurity levels may make it dicult to produce and maintain samples with the smallest nanocrystalline grain sizes. These improved samples were studied by small-angle neutron scattering (SANS) to determine the volume fraction and size distribution of pores. Excellent correlation was obtained between the total volume fraction of pores and the Archimedes density for Pd, signifying that most of the pores were relatively small and in the detectability range of SANS (I1Β±100 nm). Nanocrystalline Cu is shown to exhibit a wider pore size distribution. For Pd, the average pore sizes were slightly smaller than the average grain size, while for Cu the pore size and grain size were about the same. Both materials exhibited a trend of increasing pore size with increasing grain size. In terms of processing prerequisites, the principal condition for the production of high-density nanocrystalline Cu is an exceptionally clean synthesis environment, while nanocrystalline Pd requires compaction at elevated temperatures. These dierences are the result of Cu having both a lower melting point and a greater susceptibility to contamination by gaseous impurities such as oxygen.
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