Ductility and chemical reactions at the interface between nickel and magnesium oxide single crystals

An investigation was conducted on the interaction between nickel metal and single crystals of magnesium oxide. The nickel was cleaned with purified hydrogen gas at 800°C and melted under vacuum (5 x 10⁻⁵ mm. Hg) in contact with the magnesium oxide. The interface was examined metallographic-ally. The...

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Main Author: Hasselman, Didericus Petrus Hermannus
Language:English
Published: University of British Columbia 2011
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/2429/39557
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spelling ndltd-UBC-oai-circle.library.ubc.ca-2429-395572018-01-05T17:49:44Z Ductility and chemical reactions at the interface between nickel and magnesium oxide single crystals Hasselman, Didericus Petrus Hermannus Chemical reactions Metallic oxides Surface chemistry An investigation was conducted on the interaction between nickel metal and single crystals of magnesium oxide. The nickel was cleaned with purified hydrogen gas at 800°C and melted under vacuum (5 x 10⁻⁵ mm. Hg) in contact with the magnesium oxide. The interface was examined metallographic-ally. The formation of compounds at the interface was examined by X-ray diffraction techniques. The magnesium oxide was plastically deformed by thermal stresses which occurred on cooling. Slip occurred on four slip planes only. The slip sources were present in the surface at a depth not exceeding ten microns. They were in the form of dislocation half-loops introduced in the surface during cleavage. The introduction of these half-loops was due to the formation of cleavage steps. Rows of dislocation half-loops were due to the multiplication of a half-loop on a slip plane oriented in the direction of propagation of the cleavage crack. Bond formation consisted of the formation of a magnesium-nickel compound (Mg₂Ni). The bond strength exceeded the stress for brittle fracture of magnesium oxide. Attack of the magnesium oxide occurred preferentially at the perimeter of the interface. This led to groove-formation, which resulted in a large hysteresis of wetting. The diffusion of nickel into magnesium oxide seemed to take place mainly by diffusion along dislocations. Applied Science, Faculty of Materials Engineering, Department of Graduate 2011-12-08T19:32:42Z 2011-12-08T19:32:42Z 1959 Text Thesis/Dissertation http://hdl.handle.net/2429/39557 eng For non-commercial purposes only, such as research, private study and education. Additional conditions apply, see Terms of Use https://open.library.ubc.ca/terms_of_use. University of British Columbia
collection NDLTD
language English
sources NDLTD
topic Chemical reactions
Metallic oxides
Surface chemistry
spellingShingle Chemical reactions
Metallic oxides
Surface chemistry
Hasselman, Didericus Petrus Hermannus
Ductility and chemical reactions at the interface between nickel and magnesium oxide single crystals
description An investigation was conducted on the interaction between nickel metal and single crystals of magnesium oxide. The nickel was cleaned with purified hydrogen gas at 800°C and melted under vacuum (5 x 10⁻⁵ mm. Hg) in contact with the magnesium oxide. The interface was examined metallographic-ally. The formation of compounds at the interface was examined by X-ray diffraction techniques. The magnesium oxide was plastically deformed by thermal stresses which occurred on cooling. Slip occurred on four slip planes only. The slip sources were present in the surface at a depth not exceeding ten microns. They were in the form of dislocation half-loops introduced in the surface during cleavage. The introduction of these half-loops was due to the formation of cleavage steps. Rows of dislocation half-loops were due to the multiplication of a half-loop on a slip plane oriented in the direction of propagation of the cleavage crack. Bond formation consisted of the formation of a magnesium-nickel compound (Mg₂Ni). The bond strength exceeded the stress for brittle fracture of magnesium oxide. Attack of the magnesium oxide occurred preferentially at the perimeter of the interface. This led to groove-formation, which resulted in a large hysteresis of wetting. The diffusion of nickel into magnesium oxide seemed to take place mainly by diffusion along dislocations. === Applied Science, Faculty of === Materials Engineering, Department of === Graduate
author Hasselman, Didericus Petrus Hermannus
author_facet Hasselman, Didericus Petrus Hermannus
author_sort Hasselman, Didericus Petrus Hermannus
title Ductility and chemical reactions at the interface between nickel and magnesium oxide single crystals
title_short Ductility and chemical reactions at the interface between nickel and magnesium oxide single crystals
title_full Ductility and chemical reactions at the interface between nickel and magnesium oxide single crystals
title_fullStr Ductility and chemical reactions at the interface between nickel and magnesium oxide single crystals
title_full_unstemmed Ductility and chemical reactions at the interface between nickel and magnesium oxide single crystals
title_sort ductility and chemical reactions at the interface between nickel and magnesium oxide single crystals
publisher University of British Columbia
publishDate 2011
url http://hdl.handle.net/2429/39557
work_keys_str_mv AT hasselmandidericuspetrushermannus ductilityandchemicalreactionsattheinterfacebetweennickelandmagnesiumoxidesinglecrystals
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