Abstract: | ![]() Nanometre-sized kinks and cracks formed in 6H SiC under ball milling (BM) at room temperature have been observed and characterized on the atomic scale using high-resolution electron microscopy (HREM). Observations of the kinks show that numerous positive and negative partials are aligned at either of the kink boundaries, and the stacking sequences in the kink band are considerably different from those in the other areas. It was also observed that the (0001) lattice planes in the kink band are kinked, indicating that microplasticity occurs in the normally brittle material SiC under BM even at room temperature. HREM observations of cracks show that cracks previously observed by transmision electron microscopy are not completely open but are at the initiation stage of fracture. Inside a crack, one residual kink region can be clearly observed, which indicates a correlation between kink and crack, that is a crack evolves from a kink. |