Grain boundary segregation of Y in alpha-Al2O3 and evolution of the structural environment around the Y atoms have been investigated using high resolution STEM and EXAFS. The stages of incorporation of Y atoms by alpha-Al2O3 grain boundaries, on average, are characterized by three composition regimes: (I) dilute to saturated; (II) supersaturated [where the degree of supersaturation is determined by the nucleation barrier for Y2Al5O12 (YAG)]; and (III) equilibrium with YAG precipitates. The average Y grain boundary concentration in equilibrium with YAG precipitates has been determined to be similar to 1/4 equivalent monolayer, and the maximum supersaturation concentration has been determined to be similar to 1/2 equivalent monolayer. EXAFS revealed that accompanying the supersaturation of grain boundaries with Y is an increasing Y-O nearest neighbor coordination number and, simultaneously, a significantly increased degree of ordering of Y with respect to Al ions beyond nearest neighbor O. This Y-Al distance is the same as that for Y absorbed on the free surface of alpha-Al2O3, and the same as that expected for the Y-Al distance when Y substitutes for Al with the Y-O distance relaxed to that in Y2O3 This compositional and structural information has led to a clearer picture of how the grain boundary segregated Y concentration influences grain boundary structure. For dilute Y concentrations, Y ions preferentially fill sites in the grain boundary core which have well defined order only within the nearest neighbor shell of oxygens. As the Y concentration increases, Y begins to occupy near-boundary sites, forming two near-boundary layers, each adjacent to a grain surface. The near-boundary layer has nearest neighbor ordering extending at least to nearest neighbor cations. Nucleation of the YAG phase leads to the depletion of Y from these partially ordered layers. (C) 2000 Published by Elsevier Science Ltd on behalf of Acta Metallurgica Inc. All rights reserved.