4.1 Article

Plate-like precipitate effects on plasticity of Al-Cu micro-pillar: {100}-interfacial slip

Journal

MATERIALIA
Volume 7, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

ELSEVIER SCI LTD
DOI: 10.1016/j.mtla.2019.100416

Keywords

Dislocation core; Interfacial slip; Al-Cu alloys

Funding

  1. National Natural Science Foundation of China [51621063, 51722104, 51625103, 51790482, 51761135031, 51571157]
  2. National Key Research and Development Program of China [2017YFA0700701, 2017YFB0702301]
  3. 111 Project 2.0 of China [BP2018008]
  4. China Postdoctoral Science Foundation [2019M653595]
  5. NSFC-ANR joint project SUMMIT [51761135031, 17-CE08-0047]
  6. China Scholarship Council

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In this paper, we study the effects of theta'-Al2Cu plate-like precipitates on the plasticity of Al-Cu micro-pillars, with a sample size allowing the precipitates to cross the entire micro-pillar. {100}-slip traces are identified for the first time in Al and Al alloys at room temperature. We investigate the underlying mechanisms of this unusual {100}-slip, and show that it operates along the coherent theta'-Al2Cu precipitate/alpha-Al matrix interface. A combination of molecular dynamics simulations and stress analysis indicates that screw dislocations can cross-slip from the {111} plane onto the {100} theta'-Al2Cu/alpha-Al interface, then move on it through a kink-pair mechanism, providing a reasonable explanation to the observed {100}-slips. The roles of the theta'-Al2Cu precipitate/alpha-Al matrix interface on the properties of interfacial dislocations are studied within the Peierls-Nabarro framework, showing that the interface can stabilize the {100} screw dislocations from the spreading of the core, and increases the Peierls stress. These results improve our understanding of the mechanical behavior of Al-Cu micro-pillars at room temperature, and imply an enhanced role of interfacial slip in Al-Cu based alloys at elevated temperature in consideration of the underlying kink-pair mechanism.

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