Article ID Journal Published Year Pages File Type
1574751 Materials Science and Engineering: A 2014 8 Pages PDF
Abstract
Smaller grain sizes are known to improve the strength and ductility of metals by the Hall-Petch effect. Consequently, metallic thin films and structures which must sustain mechanical loads in service are deposited under processing conditions that lead to a fine grain size. In this study, we reveal that at temperatures as low as 473 K the failure mode of 99.99 at% pure electro-deposited Cu can change from ductile intragranular to brittle intergranular fracture. The embrittlement is accompanied by a decrease in strength and elongation to fracture. Chemical analyses indicate that the embrittlement is caused by impurities detected at grain boundaries. In situ micromechanical experiments in the scanning electron microscope and atomistic simulations are performed to study the underlying mechanisms.
Related Topics
Physical Sciences and Engineering Materials Science Materials Science (General)
Authors
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