Atom diffusion assisted by surfaces or interfaces (e.g. Coble creep) has been known to be the origin of large creep rates and superplastic softening in nanosized crystals at low temperature. By contrast, source-limited crystal slip in defect-free nanostructures engenders important strengths, but also premature plastic instability and low ductility. Here, using in-situ transmission electron microscopy, we report a slip-activated surface creep mechanism that suppresses the tendency towards plastic instability without compromising the strength, resulting in ultra-large room-temperature plasticity in face-centered-cubic silver nanocrystals. This phenomenon is shown experimentally and theoretically to prevail over a material-dependent range of diameters where surface dislocation nucleation becomes a stimulus to diffusional creep. This work provides new fundamental insight into coupled diffusive-displacive deformation mechanisms maximizing ductility and strength simultaneously in nanoscale materials.
Revised: June 18, 2020 |
Published: April 3, 2017
Citation
Zhong L., F. Sansoz, Y. He, C.M. Wang, and S.X. Mao. 2017.Slip-activated surface creep with room-temperature super-elongation in metallic nanocrystals.Nature Materials 16, no. 4:439-445.PNNL-SA-118612.doi:10.1038/nmat4813