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      Hierarchical nanotwins in single-crystal-like nickel with high strength and corrosion resistance produced via a hybrid technique

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          Abstract

          Single-crystal-like nanotwinned Nickel was prepared via a hybrid technique and it renders superb mechanical behaviors and corrosion resistance.

          Abstract

          High-density growth nanotwins enable high-strength and good ductility in metallic materials. However, twinning propensity is greatly reduced in metals with high stacking fault energy. Here we adopted a hybrid technique coupled with template-directed heteroepitaxial growth method to fabricate single-crystal-like, nanotwinned (nt) Ni. The nt Ni primarily contains hierarchical twin structures that consist of coherent and incoherent twin boundary segments with few conventional grain boundaries. In situ compression studies show the nt Ni has a high flow strength of ∼2 GPa and good deformability. Moreover, the nt Ni has superb corrosion behavior due to the unique twin structure in comparison to coarse grained and nanocrystalline counterparts. The hybrid technique opens the door for the fabrication of a wide variety of single-crystal-like nt metals with unique mechanical and chemical properties.

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          Most cited references86

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          Ultrahigh strength and high electrical conductivity in copper.

          Methods used to strengthen metals generally also cause a pronounced decrease in electrical conductivity, so that a tradeoff must be made between conductivity and mechanical strength. We synthesized pure copper samples with a high density of nanoscale growth twins. They showed a tensile strength about 10 times higher than that of conventional coarse-grained copper, while retaining an electrical conductivity comparable to that of pure copper. The ultrahigh strength originates from the effective blockage of dislocation motion by numerous coherent twin boundaries that possess an extremely low electrical resistivity, which is not the case for other types of grain boundaries.
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            Sample dimensions influence strength and crystal plasticity.

            When a crystal deforms plastically, phenomena such as dislocation storage, multiplication, motion, pinning, and nucleation occur over the submicron-to-nanometer scale. Here we report measurements of plastic yielding for single crystals of micrometer-sized dimensions for three different types of metals. We find that within the tests, the overall sample dimensions artificially limit the length scales available for plastic processes. The results show dramatic size effects at surprisingly large sample dimensions. These results emphasize that at the micrometer scale, one must define both the external geometry and internal structure to characterize the strength of a material.
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              Revealing the maximum strength in nanotwinned copper.

              The strength of polycrystalline materials increases with decreasing grain size. Below a critical size, smaller grains might lead to softening, as suggested by atomistic simulations. The strongest size should arise at a transition in deformation mechanism from lattice dislocation activities to grain boundary-related processes. We investigated the maximum strength of nanotwinned copper samples with different twin thicknesses. We found that the strength increases with decreasing twin thickness, reaching a maximum at 15 nanometers, followed by a softening at smaller values that is accompanied by enhanced strain hardening and tensile ductility. The strongest twin thickness originates from a transition in the yielding mechanism from the slip transfer across twin boundaries to the activity of preexisting easy dislocation sources.
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                Author and article information

                Journal
                NANOHL
                Nanoscale
                Nanoscale
                Royal Society of Chemistry (RSC)
                2040-3364
                2040-3372
                January 23 2020
                2020
                : 12
                : 3
                : 1356-1365
                Affiliations
                [1 ]School of Materials Engineering
                [2 ]Purdue University
                [3 ]West Lafayette
                [4 ]USA
                [5 ]Sandia National Laboratories
                [6 ]Albuquerque
                [7 ]Materials Science and Technology Division
                [8 ]Oak Ridge National Laboratory
                [9 ]Oak Ridge
                [10 ]Department of Mechanical Engineering and Engineering Science
                [11 ]University of North Carolina at Charlotte
                [12 ]Charlotte
                [13 ]School of Electrical and Computer Engineering
                Article
                10.1039/C9NR07472D
                31854411
                ae720721-5be3-4b5e-87bf-fd9d43acac37
                © 2020

                Free to read

                http://rsc.li/journals-terms-of-use#chorus

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