June 24, 2019
Journal Article

Twin formation from a twin boundary in Mg during in-situ nanomechanical testing

Abstract

An important fundamental question regarding deformation twinning is whether it is possible for twins to nucleate at boundaries or interfaces when specific stress fields are present. A corollary that follows from this question is: if this is indeed possible, what determines the proper stress field and how does it occur at the nanoscale? Here, we demonstrate the application of an in-situ nanoindentation approach to confine and dynamically capture the stages in the formation of a deformation twin at an internal twin boundary in single crystal Mg. We observe the formation of contraction twin embryos at the pre-existing extension twin boundary, and the subsequent propagation of the twin embryos into the crystal. We reveal an intermediate step, involving the coalescence of tiny embryos into a larger embryo before the nucleus emanates into the crystal. De-twinnning of the twin embryos is captured during unloading and shown to leave a remnant nanosized twin ( dislocations and boundary structure (incoherent vs. coherent) in embryo formation, as suggested by the TEM and modeling analyses, are discussed.

Revised: September 30, 2019 | Published: June 24, 2019

Citation

Jiang L., M.A. Kumar, I.J. Beyerlein, X. Wang, D. Zhang, C. Wu, and C. Cooper, et al. 2019. Twin formation from a twin boundary in Mg during in-situ nanomechanical testing. Materials Science and Engineering A. Structural Materials: Properties, Microstructure and Processing 759. PNNL-SA-147524. doi:10.1016/j.msea.2019.04.117