4.6 Article

Local amorphization in boron carbide at finite temperature: Strategies toward improved ductility

Journal

PHYSICAL REVIEW B
Volume 104, Issue 13, Pages -

Publisher

AMER PHYSICAL SOC
DOI: 10.1103/PhysRevB.104.134105

Keywords

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From first-principles simulations, it was observed that at finite temperature, icosahedral clusters in B4C gradually deconstructed, leading to local amorphization and reduced stress barriers. Strategies to improve ductility of B4C include boron enrichment to alleviate amorphous shear band formation and altering the chain structure to prevent icosahedral fracture.
Boron carbide (B4C) is superhard, but its engineering applications are limited by the abnormal brittle failure arising from amorphous shear band formation. Mitigating the local amorphization is essential to improve the ductility of B4C. Here, we carried out ab initio molecular dynamics (AIMD) simulations to examine the response of B4C to shear along two plausible slip systems (001)/[100] and (111)/[11 (2) over bar] at finite temperature. We found that the icosahedra of B4C gradually deconstruct at finite temperature, resulting in local amorphization, thereby giving rise to a lower stress barrier than that of density functional theory simulations at zero temperature. The deconstruction of the icosahedral clusters arises from the interaction with the neighboring chains. The failure mechanism at the finite temperature suggested that the local amorphization can be suppressed by altering the structure of the 12-atom icosahedron and the 3-atom chain of B4C. To demonstrate this, we replaced the B11CP icosahedron in B4C with B-12 icosahedron to form boron-rich boron carbide (B13C2) and then performed the same shear deformations. We found that local amorphization significantly decreases, which results from the modified icosahedral interaction. We also altered the 3-atom C-B-C chain to the 2-atom P-P chain and found that the accumulated shear stress can be released through icosahedral slipping, which is achieved by breaking the chains. The icosahedral slipping then prevents the destruction of icosahedra under shear deformations, expected to improve the ductility. Our results demonstrate two design strategies toward improved ductility of B4C: (1) boron enrichment can alleviate amorphous shear band formation in boron carbide, and (2) altering the 3-atom chain to a 2-atom chain and meanwhile decreasing the strength of the chain to make it less stable than the icosahedron cage may lead to an icosahedral-slipping-dominated mechanism, thereby avoiding icosahedral fracture.

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