Crystallite
A crystallite is a domain of solid-state matter that has the
same structure as a single crystal.
Solid objects that are large enough to see and handle are rarely
composed of a single crystal, except for a few cases (gems,
silicon single crystals for the electronics industry, certain
types of fiber, and single crystals of a nickel-based superalloy
for turbojet engines). Most materials are polycrystalline; they
are made of a large number of single crystals — crystallites —
held together by thin layers of amorphous solid. The crystallite
size can vary from a few nanometers to several millimeters.
If the individual crystallites are oriented randomly (that is,
if they lack texture), a large enough volume of polycrystalline
material will be approximately isotropic. This property helps
the simplifying assumptions of continuum mechanics to apply to
real-world solids. However, most manufactured materials have
some alignment to their crystallites, which must be taken into
account for accurate predictions of their behavior and
characteristics.
Metallurgists often refer to crystallites as "grains"; thus,
fracture can be an intergranular fracture or a transgranular
fracture. But there is an ambiguity with powder grains: a powder
grain can be made of several crystallites. Thus, the (powder)
"grain size" found by laser granulometry can be different from
the "grain size" (or, rather, crystallite size) found by X-ray
diffraction (e.g. Scherrer method), by optical microscopy under
polarised light, or by scanning electron microscopy
(backscattered electrons).
Although the term "crystallite" is more precise, the boundary
between two crystallites is traditionally known as a grain
boundary. The term "crystallite boundary" is rarely used, and
the fact that powder grains are not attached to one another, and
so do not form boundaries, helps to remove ambiguity in this
case.
Grain boundaries disrupt the motion of dislocations through a
material; reducing crystallite size is therefore a common way to
improve strength, often without any sacrifice in toughness. This
crystallite size-strength relationship is given by the Hall-Petch
relationship. The high interfacial energy and relatively weak
bonding in grain boundaries makes them preferred sites for the
onset of corrosion and for the precipitation of new phases from
the solid. They are also important to many of the mechanisms of
creep.
Grain boundaries are generally only a few nanometers wide. In
common materials, crystallites are large enough that grain
boundaries account for a small fraction of the material.
However, very small grain sizes are achievable. In
nanocrystalline solids, grain boundaries become a significant
volume fraction of the material, with profound effects on such
properties as diffusion and plasticity. In the limit of small
crystallites, as the volume fraction of grain boundaries
approaches 100%, the material ceases to have any crystalline
character, and thus becomes an amorphous solid.
Generally, polycrystals cannot be superheated; they will melt
promptly once they are brought to a high enough temperature.
This is because grain boundaries are amorphous, and serve as
nucleation points for the liquid phase. By contrast, if no solid
nucleus is present as a liquid cools, it tends to become
supercooled. Since this is undesirable for mechanical materials,
alloy designers often take steps against it. See grain
refinement.
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