Nanocrystalline metals are inherently unstable against thermal and mechanical stimuli, commonly resulting in significant grain growth. Also, while these metals exhibit substantial Hall-Petch strengthening, they tend to suffer from low ductility and fracture toughness. With regard to the grain growth problem, alloying elements have been employed to stabilize the microstructure through kinetic and/or thermodynamic mechanisms. And to address the ductility challenge, spatially-graded grain size distributions have been developed to facilitate heterogeneous deformation modes: high-strength at the surface and plastic deformation in the bulk. In the present work, we combine these two strategies and present a new methodology for the fabrication of gradient nanostructured metals via compositional means. We have demonstrated that annealing a compositionally stepwise Pt-Au film with a homogenous microstructure results in a film with a spatial microstructural gradient, exhibiting grains which can be twice as wide in the bulk compared to the outer surfaces. Additionally, phase-field modeling was employed for the comparison with experimental results and for further investigation of the competing mechanisms of Au diffusion and thermally induced grain growth. This fabrication method offers an alternative approach for developing the next generation of microstructurally stable gradient nanostructured films.
Under high-cycle fatigue conditions, a fatigue crack in nanocrystalline Pt was observed to undergo healing. The healing appears to occur by cold welding, facilitated by grain boundary migration, and also by local closure stresses. The healing may help explain several observations: role of air (or vacuum) on fatigue life, impeded subsurface fatigue cracking, apparent flaw healing in sub-critical cycling of ceramics, the existence of a fatigue threshold, and the role of vacuum on the fatigue threshold.
An in situ ion irradiation scanning electron microscope (I3SEM) has been developed, installed, and integrated into the Ion Beam Laboratory at Sandia National Laboratories. The I3SEM facility combines a field emission, variable pressure, scanning electron microscope, a 6 MV tandem accelerator, high flux low energy ion source, an 808 nm-wavelength laser, and multiple stages to control the thermal and mechanical state of the sample observed. The facility advances real-time understanding of materials evolution under combined environments at the mesoscale. As highlighted in multiple examples, this unique combination of tools is optimized for studying mesoscale material response in overlapping extreme environments, allowing for simultaneous ion irradiation, implantation, laser bombardment, conductive heating, cooling, and mechanical deformation.
Interlocking metasurfaces (ILMs) are architected arrays of mating features that enable joining of two bodies. Complementary to traditional joining technologies such as bolts, adhesives, and welds, ILMs combine ease of assembly, removal, and reassembly with robust mechanical properties. Structural in nature, they act in a quasi-continuous manner across a surface and enable joining of complex surfaces, e.g., lattices. In this perspective, we define an ILM, begin exploring the design domain and illustrate its breath, and pragmatically evaluate mechanical performance and manufacturability. ILMs will find applications in various fields from aerospace to micro-robotics, civil engineering, and prosthetics.
In this project, we demonstrated stable nanoscale fracture in single-crystal silicon using an in-situ wedge-loaded double cantilever beam (DCB) specimen. The fracture toughness KIC was calculated directly from instrumented measurement of force and displacement via finite element analysis with frictional corrections. Measurements on multiple test specimens were used to show KIC = 0.72 ± 0.07 MPa m1/2 on {111} planes and observe the crack-growth resistance curve in <500 nm increments. The exquisite stability of crack growth, instrumented measurement of material response, and direct visual access to observe nanoscale fracture processes in an ideally brittle material differentiate this approach from prior DCB methods.
Process parameter selection in laser powder bed fusion (LPBF) controls the as-printed dimensional tolerances, pore formation, surface quality and microstructure of printed metallic structures. Measuring the stochastic mechanical performance for a wide range of process parameters is cumbersome both in time and cost. In this study, we overcome these hurdles by using high-throughput tensile (HTT) testing of over 250 dogbone samples to examine process-driven performance of strut-like small features, ~1 mm2 in austenitic stainless steel (316 L). The output mechanical properties, porosity, surface roughness and dimensional accuracy were mapped across the printable range of laser powers and scan speeds using a continuous wave laser LPBF machine. Tradeoffs between ductility and strength are shown across the process space and their implications are discussed. While volumetric energy density deposited onto a substrate to create a melt-pool can be a useful metric for determining bulk properties, it was not found to directly correlate with output small feature performance.
The microstructural-scale mechanisms that produce cracks in metals during deformation at elevated temperatures are relevant to applications that involve thermal exposure. Prior studies of cavitation during high-temperature deformation, for example, creep, suffered from an inability to directly observe the microstructural evolution that occurs during deformation and leads to void nucleation. The current study takes advantage of modern high-speed electron backscatter diffraction (EBSD) detectors to observe cavitation in oxygen-free, high-conductivity copper in situ during deformation at 300°C. Most voids formed at the triple junction between a twin boundary and a high-angle grain boundary (HAGB). This finding does not contradict previous studies that suggested that twins are resistant to cracking—it reveals that cracks in HAGBs originate at twin/HAGB triple junctions and that cracks preferentially grow along HAGBs rather than the accompanying twins. Atomistic simulations explored the origins of this observation and suggest that twin/HAGB triple junctions are microstructural weak points.
Metals subjected to irradiation environments undergo microstructural evolution and concomitant degradation, yet the nanoscale mechanisms for such evolution remain elusive. Here, we combine in situ heavy ion irradiation, atomic resolution microscopy, and atomistic simulation to elucidate how radiation damage and interfacial defects interplay to control grain boundary (GB) motion. While classical notions of boundary evolution under irradiation rest on simple ideas of curvature-driven motion, the reality is far more complex. Focusing on an ion-irradiated Pt Σ3 GB, we show how this boundary evolves by the motion of 120° facet junctions separating nanoscale {112} facets. Our analysis considers the short- and mid-range ion interactions, which roughen the facets and induce local motion, and longer-range interactions associated with interfacial disconnections, which accommodate the intergranular misorientation. We suggest how climb of these disconnections could drive coordinated facet junction motion. These findings emphasize that both local and longer-range, collective interactions are important to understanding irradiation-induced interfacial evolution.