Institute of Metals Division - A New Electron-Microscopic Technique for Studying Metal Surfaces

The American Institute of Mining, Metallurgical, and Petroleum Engineers
Saara Asunmaa N. A. Tiner
Organization:
The American Institute of Mining, Metallurgical, and Petroleum Engineers
Pages:
7
File Size:
1435 KB
Publication Date:
Jan 1, 1964

Abstract

The early stages of nucleation of vacuunz-deposited gold coatings on electropolished surfaces of pure nickel and binary alloys of Ni-A1 and Ni-Ti have been studied, employing carefully controlled temperature and vacuum conditions. The preferential nucleation of gold on slip-plane edges on the crystal surfaces gave rise to a very pronounced decoration effect which was used in studying the morphology of the pain boundaries, etch pits, and slip planes on crystal faces. Characteristic surface patterns were observed with local dimensional variations. Most pronounced geometric patterns were ohserved in the pain boundaries of nickel and on the crystal faces of Ni-A1 alloy. The nucleation behauior of gold indicates contamination on the Ni-T1 alloy and the getter properties of titanium are presented as a tentative interpretation for the detected contamination. The markings and imperfections on cleavage surfaces of crystals have long been observed by optical microscopy.1,2 Surface-replica techniques are also used to detect the smallest steps and structural details on crystal surfaces by electron microscopy. Recently, Bassett3-5 and Sella, Conjeaud, and Trillat 6 have shown that, when gold is deposited onto a rocksalt cleavage surface, there is preferential nucleation at steps and slip-plane edges on the crystal surface. This gives rise to a very pronounced decoration effect which is invaluable for revealing the lattice steps on a cleavage surface. According to Bassett,3 gold atoms arriving during vacuum evaporation at the crystal surface have a certain mobility on the surface after arrival, particularly at elevated temperature. If a significant
Citation

APA: Saara Asunmaa N. A. Tiner  (1964)  Institute of Metals Division - A New Electron-Microscopic Technique for Studying Metal Surfaces

MLA: Saara Asunmaa N. A. Tiner Institute of Metals Division - A New Electron-Microscopic Technique for Studying Metal Surfaces. The American Institute of Mining, Metallurgical, and Petroleum Engineers, 1964.

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