1975
DOI: 10.1080/14786437508220883
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The study of faulted dipoles in copper using weak-beam electron microscopy

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Cited by 41 publications
(4 citation statements)
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“…When vacancy diffusion is not favored by temperature, the transformed configurations with linear shapes, as shown in Al, require larger breaking force compared with the classical dislocation dipoles (see figure 9 in [15]). The 60 • faulted dipole has the lowest energy among all the orientations (figure 6) and thus is frequently observed [35][36][37], although such dipoles anneal out at high temperatures. At intermediate temperatures, as indicated in figure 12, the clustering process can take up to seconds forming point-defectlike debris, including various vacancy clusters, SFTs, etc, whose stability is indicated by the experimental observation of the profuse existence of point defect clusters in a number of fcc metals and alloys after quenching or deformation [38,39].…”
Section: Long-term Stability Of the Resulting Debrismentioning
confidence: 88%
“…When vacancy diffusion is not favored by temperature, the transformed configurations with linear shapes, as shown in Al, require larger breaking force compared with the classical dislocation dipoles (see figure 9 in [15]). The 60 • faulted dipole has the lowest energy among all the orientations (figure 6) and thus is frequently observed [35][36][37], although such dipoles anneal out at high temperatures. At intermediate temperatures, as indicated in figure 12, the clustering process can take up to seconds forming point-defectlike debris, including various vacancy clusters, SFTs, etc, whose stability is indicated by the experimental observation of the profuse existence of point defect clusters in a number of fcc metals and alloys after quenching or deformation [38,39].…”
Section: Long-term Stability Of the Resulting Debrismentioning
confidence: 88%
“…Dissociated faulted dipoles were studied in detail in silicon and germanium (Winter et al, 1977;Sato, 1983) and in f.c.c. metals (Antonopoulos & Winter, 1976;Carter &? Holmes, 1975, 1977Cockayne et al, 1971).…”
Section: T H E D E T E R M I N a T I O N Of T H E Parameters O F Dissmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Because of the relatively simple interpretation of multipole diffraction patterns that the above properties imply it seemed likely that a study of the diffraction patterns and images of dislocation multipoles could provide a critical test of the accuracy with which a periodic strain field can be characterized from the diffraction pattern fine structure. Wintner & Karnthaler (1978) have shown that in Cu-A1 alloys some or all of the dipoles in dislocation multipoles may exist as faulted dipoles (Hirsch, 1963;Seeger, 1964;Steeds, 1967;Carter & Holmes, 1975). When this occurs two of the partial dislocations are replaced by stairrod dislocations and a stacking fault on the inclined plane.…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%