Article ID Journal Published Year Pages File Type
805696 Theoretical and Applied Mechanics Letters 2011 38992 Pages PDF
Abstract

The ductility of thin metal films on polymer substrates reported in recent experiments has a huge disparity, ranging from less than 1 % up to more than 50 %. To reveal the underpinning origins for such a large variation, this paper reports a systematic computational study of two competing failure mechanisms: metal film necking and grain boundary cracking. The quantitative results suggest that strong grain boundaries and metal/polymer interfacial adhesion are keys to achieve high ductility of polymer-supported metal films.

Related Topics
Physical Sciences and Engineering Engineering Mechanical Engineering