Title of article
Specimen- and grain-size dependence of compression deformation behavior in nanocrystalline copper
Author/Authors
Norihiko L. Okamoto، نويسنده , , Daisuke Kashioka، نويسنده , , Tetsuji Hirato، نويسنده , , Haruyuki Inui، نويسنده ,
Issue Information
روزنامه با شماره پیاپی سال 2014
Pages
11
From page
173
To page
183
Abstract
The compression deformation behavior of electrodeposited nanocrystalline copper pillars with average grain sizes (d) of 360, 100, and 34 nm has been investigated as a function of specimen size (D). The yield stress for nanocrystalline pillars with d = 360 and 100 nm does not depend on specimen size, exhibiting essentially the bulk yield stress until the specimen size is reduced down to the critical values ((D/d)∗ = 35 and 85), below which the yield stress decreases with the decrease in specimen size. In contrast, the yield stress for nanocrystalline pillars with d = 34 nm does not depend much on specimen size, exhibiting the bulk yield stress value for all specimen sizes investigated. The dominant deformation mechanism changes from dislocation glide for pillars with d = 360 and 100 nm to grain boundary diffusional creep for pillars with d = 34 nm. Grain-size induced softening occurs for pillars with d = 34 nm being consistent with the occurrence of change in deformation mechanisms, whereas the bulk yield stress for pillars with d = 360 and 100 nm increases with the decrease in grain size according to the classical Hall–Petch relationship. The critical (D/d)∗ values determined for nanocrystalline Cu pillars with d = 360 and 100 nm increases with the decrease in grain size so as to conform to the same power law scaling obtained for coarse-grained Cu polycrystals. This is the first indication that the specimen size-induced softening extends from micrometer to nanometer scales as far as the dominant deformation mechanism is dislocation glide. The considerably large critical (D/d)∗ values determined for nanocrystalline Cu pillars with d = 360 and 100 nm are discussed in terms of strain continuity among neighboring grains and the generation of geometrically necessary dislocations to maintain strain continuity at the grain boundaries.
Keywords
Mechanical testing (C) , Focused ion beam (FIB) method , Dislocations (A) , Polycrystalline material (B) , Crystal plasticity (B)
Journal title
International Journal of Plasticity
Serial Year
2014
Journal title
International Journal of Plasticity
Record number
1255696
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