Issue 26, 2019

Size-dependent dislocation–twin interactions

Abstract

Dislocation–twin interactions critically control the plastic deformation and ultrahigh strength of nanotwinned metals. Here, we report a strong twin-thickness dependence of dislocation–twin interaction mechanisms from the tensile deformation of face-centered cubic metallic nanocrystals by in situ nanomechanical testing. Direct observations at atomic scale reveal that the predominant dislocation–twin interaction abruptly changes from dislocation transmission on the {111} slip planes to the unusual (100) slip plane of the twin, when the twin thickness is smaller than 4 layers. Using atomistic simulations, we find that the energy barrier for {100} slip transmission mechanism gradually decreases, with decreasing twin thickness, below the energy level required for normal (111) slip transmission, which remains identical for all twin sizes. Our in situ observations and simulations provide atomistic insights into a fundamentally new mechanism of plasticity in nanotwinned metals, down to the lowest twin size limit.

Graphical abstract: Size-dependent dislocation–twin interactions

Supplementary files

Article information

Article type
Paper
Submitted
29 Apr 2019
Accepted
16 Jun 2019
First published
17 Jun 2019

Nanoscale, 2019,11, 12672-12679

Author version available

Size-dependent dislocation–twin interactions

J. Wang, G. Cao, Z. Zhang and F. Sansoz, Nanoscale, 2019, 11, 12672 DOI: 10.1039/C9NR03637G

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