Article ID | Journal | Published Year | Pages | File Type |
---|---|---|---|---|
7980631 | Materials Science and Engineering: A | 2014 | 13 Pages |
Abstract
Manipulation of internal features, e.g., layer/twin interfaces, is standard practice in engineering structural materials to tailor their properties. In the present work, we fabricated nanotwinned (NT)- and nanocrystalline (NC)-Cu/X (X=Cr, Zr) nanolayered micropillars (NLs) with equal layer thickness (h) spanning from 5 to 125Â nm. The microcompression methodology was employed to investigate the layer/twin interfaces effects on plastic characteristics of nanolayered materials at different strain rates. Experimental results clearly unveil that the Cu/X NTNLs exhibit a significant increase in strength and in strain rate sensitivity (SRS) by introducing nanotwins, in comparison with the Cu/X NCNLs. The non-monotonic evolution of SRS with h observed in the Cu/X NTNLs is explained by a competition between the monotonically increased interfaces density and the decreased twin boundaries density with reduction in feature size h. Unlike the monotonically enhanced SRS of Cu/X NCNLs, the SRS of Cu/X NTNLs first decreases and subsequently increases with reducing h. A phenomenological model is proposed to rationalize these experimental findings and highlight the microstructural feature size effects on the rate-limiting processes of metallic materials.
Related Topics
Physical Sciences and Engineering
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Authors
J.Y. Zhang, Y.Q. Wang, K. Wu, P. Zhang, G. Liu, G.J. Zhang, J. Sun,