Classical theory of crystal dislocations : from iron to gallium nitride
Author(s)
Bibliographic Information
Classical theory of crystal dislocations : from iron to gallium nitride
World Scientific, c2017
- : [hardback]
- Other Title
-
Kesshou ten-i ron
結晶転位論 : 鉄から窒化ガリウムまで
Available at / 7 libraries
-
The Institute for Solid State Physics Library. The University of Tokyo.図書室
: [hardback]428.45:C337210386954
-
No Libraries matched.
- Remove all filters.
Note
Includes bibliographical references and index
Description and Table of Contents
Description
The book consists of two parts: Part 1 is a standard text of dislocation theory. Mathematics is avoided as much as possible. Part 2 describes application of dislocation theory, which includes mechanical properties (including the inverse temperature dependence of strength) and dislocations in functional materials such as Si, GaN and SiC and dislocations in a thin crystal such as an epitaxial layer. This is what has been long anticipated among researchers in industry.The book contains about 330 illustrations (mostly originals by the author) and the pictures obtained by the author by means of in-situ experiment in a transmission electron microscope over the past 50 years.This book includes many exercises, which the author found useful when he was teaching in Department of Materials Science and Engineering of Nagoya University to stimulate their interests in dislocation theory.
Table of Contents
- The Fundamentals of Crystallography
- Geometry of Dislocations
- Fundamentals of Elasticity Theory
- Elasticity Theory of Dislocations
- Elastic Interaction Between Dislocations and Solute Atoms
- Motion of Dislocations (Peierls Force) and Multiplication (Frank-Read Source, Bardeen-Herring Source)
- Dislocation Groups
- Dissociated Dislocations in FCC Structure
- Dissociated Dislocations in HCP
- Dislocations in Ordered Alloys and Intermetallic and Inverse Temperature Dependence of the Strength
- Dislocations in Diamond, Zincblend and Wurtzite Structures and SiC
- Dislocations and Macroscopic Strength
- Dislocations in Thin Foils
by "Nielsen BookData"