Publication
Interface Science
Review

Diffusion, solute segregations and interfacial energies in some material: An overview

View publication

Abstract

We have shown a connection among the three important properties of interfaces, namely, the free energy, diffusion and solute segregation through the conjecture that the interface free energy is the difference between those responsible for diffusion in the lattice and the interface itself. The interface energy is known to decrease upon solute additions. We discuss the methodology and the thermodynamical analysis of the diffusion parameters which enable extraction of the interracial energies and illustrate them by results obtained in a wide variety of materials. Investigations carried out in pure polycrystalline metals have yielded grain boundary energies comparable to those directly measured. Furthermore, we discuss the role of solute segregation at grain boundaries in alloys in altering diffusion. From the perturbations caused, the solute segregation parameters-the enthalpy and the entropy of binding-have been extracted and levels of solute concentrations estimated. It is shown that similar analyses when applied to complex materials, e.g. the Pb-Sn eutectic alloy, several intermetallic compounds, and oxide systems, also result in acceptable values of interface energies and segregation factors. Finally, some ad-hoc guidelines are provided to alter diffusion in interfaces through solute additions in order to achieve some end use engineering objectives.

Date

Publication

Interface Science

Authors

Topics

Share