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Related Concept Videos

Metallic Solids02:37

Metallic Solids

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Metallic solids such as crystals of copper, aluminum, and iron are formed by metal atoms. The structure of metallic crystals is often described as a uniform distribution of atomic nuclei within a “sea” of delocalized electrons. The atoms within such a metallic solid are held together by a unique force known as metallic bonding that gives rise to many useful and varied bulk properties.
All metallic solids exhibit high thermal and electrical conductivity, metallic luster, and malleability....
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Lattice Centering and Coordination Number02:33

Lattice Centering and Coordination Number

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The structure of a crystalline solid, whether a metal or not, is best described by considering its simplest repeating unit, which is referred to as its unit cell. The unit cell consists of lattice points that represent the locations of atoms or ions. The entire structure then consists of this unit cell repeating in three dimensions. The three different types of unit cells present in the cubic lattice are illustrated in Figure 1.
Types of Unit Cells
Imagine taking a large number of identical...
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Ferromagnetism01:31

Ferromagnetism

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Materials like iron, nickel, and cobalt consist of magnetic domains, within which the magnetic dipoles are arranged parallel to each other. The magnetic dipoles are rigidly aligned in the same direction within a domain by quantum mechanical coupling among the atoms. This coupling is so strong that even thermal agitation at room temperature cannot break it. The result is that each domain has a net dipole moment. However, some materials have weaker coupling, and are ferromagnetic at lower...
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Crystal Field Theory - Octahedral Complexes02:58

Crystal Field Theory - Octahedral Complexes

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Crystal Field Theory
To explain the observed behavior of transition metal complexes (such as colors), a model involving electrostatic interactions between the electrons from the ligands and the electrons in the unhybridized d orbitals of the central metal atom has been developed. This electrostatic model is crystal field theory (CFT). It helps to understand, interpret, and predict the colors, magnetic behavior, and some structures of coordination compounds of transition metals.
CFT focuses on...
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X-ray Crystallography02:18

X-ray Crystallography

25.2K
The size of the unit cell and the arrangement of atoms in a crystal may be determined from measurements of the diffraction of X-rays by the crystal, termed X-ray crystallography.
Diffraction
Diffraction is the change in the direction of travel experienced by an electromagnetic wave when it encounters a physical barrier whose dimensions are comparable to those of the wavelength of the light. X-rays are electromagnetic radiation with wavelengths about as long as the distance between neighboring...
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Valence Bond Theory02:42

Valence Bond Theory

10.2K
Coordination compounds and complexes exhibit different colors, geometries, and magnetic behavior, depending on the metal atom/ion and ligands from which they are composed. In an attempt to explain the bonding and structure of coordination complexes, Linus Pauling proposed the valence bond theory, or VBT, using the concepts of hybridization and the overlapping of the atomic orbitals. According to VBT, the central metal atom or ion (Lewis acid) hybridizes to provide empty orbitals of suitable...
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Related Experiment Video

Updated: Nov 21, 2025

Theoretical Calculation and Experimental Verification for Dislocation Reduction in Germanium Epitaxial Layers with Semicylindrical Voids on Silicon
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Mechanisms for interstitial dislocation loops to diffuse in BCC iron.

N Gao1,2, Z W Yao3,4, G H Lu5

  • 1Institute of Frontier and Interdisciplinary Science and Key Laboratory of Particle Physics and Particle Irradiation (MOE), ShanDong University, 266237, QingDao, China.

Nature Communications
|January 12, 2021
PubMed
Summary
This summary is machine-generated.

Newly discovered diffusion mechanism allows <100> interstitial dislocation loops in body-centered cubic (BCC) iron to move. This finding challenges previous beliefs about loop immobility and impacts understanding of material behavior under irradiation.

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Area of Science:

  • Materials Science
  • Condensed Matter Physics
  • Computational Materials Science

Background:

  • Dislocation loop mobility is crucial for material mechanical strength and microstructural evolution under deformation and radiation.
  • In body-centered cubic (BCC) iron, <100> interstitial dislocation loops were previously considered immobile.

Purpose of the Study:

  • To investigate the mobility of <100> interstitial dislocation loops in BCC iron.
  • To uncover the underlying mechanism for loop diffusion.

Main Methods:

  • Self-adaptive accelerated molecular dynamics (SSAMD) simulations were employed to model loop behavior.
  • In-situ transmission electron microscopy (TEM) was used for experimental validation.

Main Results:

  • A novel diffusion mechanism for <100> interstitial dislocation loops was discovered.
  • The mechanism involves habit plane changes between {100} and {110} planes, enabling one-dimensional diffusion.
  • SSAMD modeling results were experimentally confirmed by TEM.

Conclusions:

  • <100> interstitial dislocation loops in BCC iron are mobile via a newly identified mechanism.
  • This finding is significant for understanding <100> loop wall formation and BCC Fe mechanical behavior under irradiation.