Diffusion Flashcards

1
Q

Define diffusion

A

Movement of matter down an activity gradient (due to a driving force)

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2
Q

How is atom concentration calculated?

A
Ca = Na/V 
Concentration = number of atoms/volume
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3
Q

Describe uphill and downhill diffusion, when they occur and what they mean

A
Downhill = when lowest G is when AB is completely mixed, they will diffuse across interface until completely mixed 
Uphill = when lowest G is when A+B are separate, atoms will not move across interface and will move along activity gradient but away from concentration gradient
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4
Q

Describe carburisation

A

Carburisation - adding carbon to a material with unlimited carbon supply at surface, as time inc more carbon diffused into material + effects deeper layers
Diffusion stops when carbon level in centre of material = carbon in air

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5
Q

Describe inter-diffusion

A

Diffusant moves from one sample to another, unlimited supply and concentration not fixed at interface as atoms diffuse in both directions
As time inc diffusion effects deeper layers of the material

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6
Q

Describe thin film diffusion

A

Finite amount of diffusant

Means that when t inc the amount of diffusant levels out across material until all same level

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7
Q

Describe homogenisation

A

Diffusant fluctuations across material, as time increases diffusants mix into material so concentration decreases
X = root (Dt)
X = distance, D = diffusion constant, t=time

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8
Q

What is Ficks 1st law?

A
J = -D. δc/δx
J = diffusion flux (amount of diffusion), D = diffusion coefficient (mat property), c = concentration, x = distance
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9
Q

Derive ficks 1st law

A

Interface separating 2 materials, flux across surface = atoms crossing interface/Sarea.time, flux is proportional to concentration, flux is inversely proportional to distance atoms travel, means flux = kδc/δx with k = diffusion coefficient

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10
Q

What is the diffusion coefficient and what’s it effected by?

A

Measure of how fast an atom diffused through a material

Affected by heat, atom size, valence, crystal structure and diffusion mechanism used

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11
Q

How is diffusivity Coefficient measured?

A

Take a metal specimen and place a radioactive isotope of the metal around it, place into a furnace at a set temp for a set time, quench material and remove isotope film, use detectors to measure concentration of isotope on sample, plot graph using ficks 2 and determine D for that temp

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12
Q

What is ficks 2nd law?

A
δC/δt = D. δ2C/δx2
C = concentration, t = time, x = distance, D = diffusivity coefficient
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13
Q

How is diffusion’s relationship with temp measured?

A

Repeat diffusivity experiment at multiple temperatures, then plot ln D vs 1/T to get a linear relationship

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14
Q

What is diffusivitys relationship with temp?

A
D = D0.e-(Q/RT) 
D = diffusivity, D0 = pre-exponential factor, Q = activation energy, R = universal gas constant l, T = absolute temp
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15
Q

How is diffusion rate calculated?

A

J = atoms crossing/surface area.time

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16
Q

How does crystal structure, bonding characteristics and vacancy concentration affect diffusivity?

A

1- open structures (BCC) have lower activation energies = easier to move through
2- stronger bonds take greater energy to break = higher activation energies
3- more vacancy’s = less bonds to break = less activation energy = higher diffusion

17
Q

What affects diffusivity more, activation energy or the preexponetial factor?

A

Activation energy, if this is high then D = D0 meaning high diffusion rates

18
Q

What are the four diffusion mechanisms?

A

Interstitial
Vacancy
Grain boundary
Pipe

19
Q

Describe interstitial diffusion

A

Only a fraction of interstitials occupied (BCC least), diffusant moves between interstitials but random movement into any of the 6 neighbouring positions (3D lattice)
D = 1/6 . a2 . r
D = diffusion, a = diffusant atoms, r = jump frequency

20
Q

What dictates the jump frequency in interstitial diffusion?

A

How many atomic sites an atom can move to
Frequency of vibrations
Activation energy (as only a fraction of atoms can jump each time)

21
Q

Describe vacancy diffusion

A

Atom moves into vacancy, must be a vacancy near atom for it to move and atom leaves vacancy when it moves = fairly likely for atom to move back as not many vacancies in material
D = 1/6 . a2 . f . r
D = diffusion rate, a = number of atoms, f = jump back rate, r = jump frequency

22
Q

Compare interstitial and vacancy diffusion

A

Interstitial much quicker diffusion because lower activation energy (interstitial = migration energy, vacancy = migration + formation energy)
In both bigger atoms diffuse slower (as take more migration energy)
Bonding strength also affects activation energy (stronger = slower diffusion)

23
Q

Define migration energy

A

Energy taken for atom to move down pathway
Bigger atoms = larger migration energy
Larger pathway = smaller migration energy

24
Q

Describe grain boundary and pipe diffusion

A

Grain boundary - sets up easy path to move down as resembles an amorphous structure (less dense packed) = lower energy required
Pipe - rare (so usually ignored) but cause a ‘pipe’ pathway down lattice, lowers activation energy as already strained lattice = quick diffusion