Anomalous Electrical Resistivity in Titanium-Molybdenum Alloys

J. C. Ho and E. W. Collings
Phys. Rev. B 6, 3727 – Published 15 November 1972
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Abstract

The results of resistivity measurements on Ti-Mo alloys of concentrations 5-20 at.% Mo are discussed. The experimentally determined resistivity concentration dependence, which exhibits a pronounced local maximum near 8 at.% Mo, is compared with some calculated curves, derived with the aid of previously determined Fermi-density-of-states [n(EF)] and Debye-temperature (ΘD) data. On the assumption that the total resistivity is the sum of contributions due to thermal scattering (the ideal resistivity ρi) and solute scattering (ρs), the measured resistivity in the concentration range 5-15 at.% Mo is shown to be anomalously high. For a quenched alloy of composition near the middle of the above range, viz., Ti-Mo (10 at.%), the temperature dependence of resistivity (dρdT) is negative between 4 and 480 K. But at higher temperatures dρdT is positive, and after being aged at 620 K the alloy assumes a normal positive dρdT over the full temperature range of 4-620 K. As a result of this investigation it is deduced that the anomalous magnitude, composition dependence, and temperature dependence are all associated in one way or another with an ω-phase precipitate (a small fraction of which is reversible or "athermal") occurring in the brine-quenched alloys within the composition range 5-15 at.% Mo. It is concluded, however, that the observed resistivity effects do not derive from intrinsic physical properties of the ω phase itself, but are due instead to electronic scattering from the interfaces between the precipitate particles and the matrix. Interfacial scattering associated with the irreversible (isothermal) ω phase is responsible for the anomalous isothermal resistivity, while the relatively small athermal ω-phase component gives rise to the negative dρdT exhibited by Ti-Mo (10 at.%).

  • Received 11 May 1972

DOI:https://doi.org/10.1103/PhysRevB.6.3727

©1972 American Physical Society

Authors & Affiliations

J. C. Ho* and E. W. Collings

  • Columbus Laboratories, Battelle, Columbus, Ohio 43201

  • *Present address: Physics Department, Wichita State University, Wichita, Kans. 67208.

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Issue

Vol. 6, Iss. 10 — 15 November 1972

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