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Line imperfections are called dislocations and occur in crystalline materials only. Dislocations can be an edge type, screw type, or mixed type, depending on how they distort the lattice, as shown in Figure 8. It is important to note that dislocations cannot end inside a crystal. They must end at a crystal edge or other dislocation, or they must close back on themselves. Edge dislocations consist of an extra row or plane of atoms in the crystal structure. The imperfection may extend in a straight line all the way through the crystal or it may follow an irregular path. It may also be short, extending only a small distance into the crystal causing a slip of one atomic distance along the glide plane (direction the edge imperfection is moving).
Figure 8 Line Defects (Dislocations) The slip occurs when the crystal is subjected to a stress, and the dislocation moves through the crystal until it reaches the edge or is arrested by another dislocation, as shown in Figure 9. Position 1 shows a normal crystal structure. Position 2 shows a force applied from the left side and a counterforce applied from the right side. Positions 3 to 5 show how the structure is slipping. Position 6 shows the final deformed crystal structure. The slip of one active plane is ordinarily on the order of 1000 atomic distances and, to produce yielding, slip on many planes is required.
Figure 9 Slips Screw dislocations can be produced by a tearing of the crystal parallel to the slip direction. If a screw dislocation is followed all the way around a complete circuit, it would show a slip pattern similar to that of a screw thread. The pattern may be either left or right handed. This requires that some of the atomic bonds are re-formed continuously so that the crystal has almost the same form after yielding that it had before. The orientation of dislocations may vary from pure edge to pure screw. At some intermediate point, they may possess both edge and screw characteristics. The importance of dislocations is based on the ease at which they can move through crystals.
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