Competition between shear localization and tensile detwinning in twinned nanowires

Recently, a transition of deformation mechanism from localized dislocation slip to delocalized plasticity via an anomalous tensile detwinning mechanism has been discovered in bitwinned metallic nanowires (NWs) with a single twin boundary (TB) running parallel to the NW length. However, experiments s...

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Main Authors: Yin, Sheng, Cheng, Guangming, Zhu, Yong, Gao, Huajian
Other Authors: School of Mechanical and Aerospace Engineering
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: 2021
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Online Access:https://hdl.handle.net/10356/146522
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Institution: Nanyang Technological University
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spelling sg-ntu-dr.10356-1465222021-02-23T06:26:29Z Competition between shear localization and tensile detwinning in twinned nanowires Yin, Sheng Cheng, Guangming Zhu, Yong Gao, Huajian School of Mechanical and Aerospace Engineering Science::Physics Ductility Fracture Recently, a transition of deformation mechanism from localized dislocation slip to delocalized plasticity via an anomalous tensile detwinning mechanism has been discovered in bitwinned metallic nanowires (NWs) with a single twin boundary (TB) running parallel to the NW length. However, experiments showed that the anomalous tensile detwinning in most of bitwinned NWs does not propagate through the whole NW, which limits the NWs failure strain when compared to the twinning-induced superplasticity in single-crystalline NWs. An elusive but fundamentally important question is that what factors might affect the propagation of tensile detwinning in such bitwinned NWs. In addition, can this tensile detwinning mechanism be applied to other types of twinned NWs? Here, based on in situ transmission electron microscopy testing and molecular dynamics simulations, a competition between shear localization and tensile detwinning is identified. By dividing the tensile detwinning mechanism into two steps and investigating each step separately, it is found that the quality of a single-crystalline embryo formed during step one determines the succeeding detwinning propagation (step two) and the final plastic strain. Furthermore, this anomalous tensile detwinning mechanism is extended to other metallic NWs with multiple TBs running parallel to the length direction, such as asymmetric pentatwinned NWs and NWs with multiple parallel TBs. This work highlights the important role of detwinning in large plasticity in metallic NWs with different twin structures. Published version 2021-02-23T06:26:29Z 2021-02-23T06:26:29Z 2020 Journal Article Yin, S., Cheng, G., Zhu, Y., & Gao, H. (2020). Competition between shear localization and tensile detwinning in twinned nanowires. Physical Review Materials, 4(2), 023603-. doi:10.1103/physrevmaterials.4.023603 2475-9953 https://hdl.handle.net/10356/146522 10.1103/PhysRevMaterials.4.023603 2-s2.0-85082736379 2 4 en Physical Review Materials © 2020 American Physical Society (APS). All rights reserved. This paper was published in Physical Review Materials and is made available with permission of American Physical Society (APS). application/pdf
institution Nanyang Technological University
building NTU Library
continent Asia
country Singapore
Singapore
content_provider NTU Library
collection DR-NTU
language English
topic Science::Physics
Ductility
Fracture
spellingShingle Science::Physics
Ductility
Fracture
Yin, Sheng
Cheng, Guangming
Zhu, Yong
Gao, Huajian
Competition between shear localization and tensile detwinning in twinned nanowires
description Recently, a transition of deformation mechanism from localized dislocation slip to delocalized plasticity via an anomalous tensile detwinning mechanism has been discovered in bitwinned metallic nanowires (NWs) with a single twin boundary (TB) running parallel to the NW length. However, experiments showed that the anomalous tensile detwinning in most of bitwinned NWs does not propagate through the whole NW, which limits the NWs failure strain when compared to the twinning-induced superplasticity in single-crystalline NWs. An elusive but fundamentally important question is that what factors might affect the propagation of tensile detwinning in such bitwinned NWs. In addition, can this tensile detwinning mechanism be applied to other types of twinned NWs? Here, based on in situ transmission electron microscopy testing and molecular dynamics simulations, a competition between shear localization and tensile detwinning is identified. By dividing the tensile detwinning mechanism into two steps and investigating each step separately, it is found that the quality of a single-crystalline embryo formed during step one determines the succeeding detwinning propagation (step two) and the final plastic strain. Furthermore, this anomalous tensile detwinning mechanism is extended to other metallic NWs with multiple TBs running parallel to the length direction, such as asymmetric pentatwinned NWs and NWs with multiple parallel TBs. This work highlights the important role of detwinning in large plasticity in metallic NWs with different twin structures.
author2 School of Mechanical and Aerospace Engineering
author_facet School of Mechanical and Aerospace Engineering
Yin, Sheng
Cheng, Guangming
Zhu, Yong
Gao, Huajian
format Article
author Yin, Sheng
Cheng, Guangming
Zhu, Yong
Gao, Huajian
author_sort Yin, Sheng
title Competition between shear localization and tensile detwinning in twinned nanowires
title_short Competition between shear localization and tensile detwinning in twinned nanowires
title_full Competition between shear localization and tensile detwinning in twinned nanowires
title_fullStr Competition between shear localization and tensile detwinning in twinned nanowires
title_full_unstemmed Competition between shear localization and tensile detwinning in twinned nanowires
title_sort competition between shear localization and tensile detwinning in twinned nanowires
publishDate 2021
url https://hdl.handle.net/10356/146522
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