Zener pinning is the influence of a dispersion of fine particles on the movement of low- and high-angle grain boundaries through a polycrystalline material. Small particles act to prevent the motion of such boundaries by exerting a pinning pressure which counteracts the driving force pushing the boundaries. Zener pinning is very important in materials processing as it has a strong influence on recovery, recrystallization and grain growth.
A boundary is an imperfection in the crystal structure and as such is associated with a certain quantity of energy. When a boundary passes through an incoherent particle then the portion of boundary that would be inside the particle essentially ceases to exist. In order to move past the particle some new boundary must be created, and this is energetically unfavourable. While the region of boundary near the particle is pinned, the rest of the boundary continues trying to move forward under its own driving force. This results in the boundary becoming bowed between those points where it is anchored to the particles.
The figure illustrates a boundary intersecting with an incoherent particle of radius
r
AB=2\pir\cos\theta
\gamma\sin\theta
\gamma
F=2\pir\gamma\cos\theta\sin\theta
The maximum restraining force occurs when
\theta=45\circ
Fmax=\pir\gamma
In order to determine the pinning force resulting from a given dispersion of particles, Clarence Zener made several important assumptions:
For a volume fraction,
Fv
r
Ntotal=
3Fv | |
4\pir3 |
.
From this total number density, only those particles that are within one particle radius will be able to interact with the boundary. If the boundary is essentially planar, then this fraction will be given by
Ninteract=2rNtotal=
3Fv | |
2\pi r2 |
.
Given the assumption that all particles apply the maximum pinning force,
Fmax
Ps=NinteractFmax=
3Fv\gamma | |
2r |
.
This is referred to as the Zener pinning pressure. It follows that large pinning pressures are produced by:
The Zener pinning pressure is orientation dependent, which means that the exact pinning pressure depends on the amount of coherence at the grain boundaries.
Particle pinning has been studied extensively with computer simulations, such as Monte Carlo and phase field methods. These methods can capture interfaces with complex shapes and provide better approximations for the pinning force.right|thumb|Interaction of a particle and an interface using a phase-field model.right|thumb|350px|Interface interacting with ensemble of particles. Click to see the animation.
- "Contribution à l'étude de la dynamique du Zener pinning: simulations numériques par éléments finis", Thesis in French (2003). by G. Couturier.
- "3D finite element simulation of the inhibition of normal grain growth by particles". Acta Materialia, 53, pp. 977–989, (2005). by G. Couturier, R. Doherty, Cl. Maurice, R. Fortunier.
- "3D finite element simulation of Zener pinning dynamics". Philosophical Magazine, vol 83, n° 30, pp. 3387–3405, (2003). by G. Couturier, Cl. Maurice, R. Fortunier.