Journal of Materials Science & Technology | 2021

Ultra-high strength yet superplasticity in a hetero-grain-sized nanocrystalline Au nanowire

 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 

Abstract


Abstract Nanocrystalline metals often display a high strength up to the gigapascal level, yet they suffer from poor plasticity. Previous studies have shown that the development of hetero-sized grains can efficiently overcome the strength-ductility trade-off of nanocrystalline metals. However, whether this strategy can lead to the fabrication of nanocrystalline nanowires exhibiting both high strength and superplasticity is unclear, similar to the atomistic deformation mechanism. In this paper, we show that ultra-small nanocrystalline Au nanowires comprising grains in both the Hall–Petch and inverse Hall–Petch grain-size regions can exhibit extremely high uniform elongation (236%) and high strength (2.34 gigapascals) at room temperature. In situ atomic-scale observations revealed that the plastic deformation underwent two stages. In the first stage, the super-elongation ability originated from the intergrain plasticity of small grains via mechanisms such as grain boundary migration and grain rotation. This intergrain plasticity caused the grains in the heterogeneous-structured nanowires to grow very large. In the second stage, the super-elongation ability originated from intragrain plasticity accompanied by the diffusion of surface atoms. Our results show that the hetero-grain-sized nanocrystalline nanowires, comprising grains with sizes both in the strongest Hall–Petch effect region and the inverse Hall–Petch effect region, were simultaneously ultra-strong and ductile. They displayed neither a strength-ductility trade-off nor plastic instability.

Volume None
Pages None
DOI 10.1016/j.jmst.2021.05.063
Language English
Journal Journal of Materials Science & Technology

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