4.8 Article

Strengthening Mechanism of a Single Precipitate in a Metallic Nanocube

Journal

NANO LETTERS
Volume 19, Issue 1, Pages 255-260

Publisher

AMER CHEMICAL SOC
DOI: 10.1021/acs.nanolett.8b03857

Keywords

Coherent interface; semicoherent interface; precipitate; strain hardening; compression; in situ scanning electron microscopy

Funding

  1. Stanford start-up funds
  2. National Defense and Science Engineering Graduate Fellowship
  3. U.S. Department of Energy, Office of Basic Energy Sciences, Division of Materials Sciences and Engineering [DE-SC0010412]
  4. U.S. Department of Energy by LLNL [DE-ACS2-07NA27344]
  5. National Science Foundation [ECCS-1542152]

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Nanoprecipitates play a significant role in the strength, ductility, and damage tolerance of metallic alloys through their interaction with crystalline defects, especially dislocations. However, the difficulty of observing the action of individual precipitates during plastic deformation has made it challenging to conclusively determine the mechanisms of the precipitate-defect interaction for a given alloy system and presents a major bottleneck in the rational design of nanostructured alloys. Here, we demonstrate the in situ compression of core-shell nanocubes as a promising platform to determine the precise role of individual precipitates. Each nanocube with a dimension of similar to 85 nm contains a single spherical precipitate of similar to 25 nm diameter. The Au-core/Ag-shell nanocubes show a yield strength of 495 MPa with no strain hardening. The deformation mechanism is determined to be surface nucleation of dislocations which easily traverses through the coherent Au-Ag interface. On the other hand, the Au-core/Cu-shell nanocubes show a yield strength of 829 MPa with a pronounced strain hardening rate. Molecular dynamics and dislocation dynamics simulations, in conjunction with TEM analysis, have demonstrated the yield mechanism to be the motion of threading dislocations extending from the semicoherent Au-Cu interface to the surface, and strain hardening to be caused by a single-armed Orowan looping mechanism. Nanocube compression offers an exciting opportunity to directly compare computational models of defect dynamics with in situ deformation measurements to elucidate the precise mechanisms of precipitate hardening.

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