X. Wendy Gu
California Institute of Technology
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Featured researches published by X. Wendy Gu.
Nano Letters | 2014
X. Wendy Gu; Mehdi Jafary-Zadeh; David Z. Chen; Zhaoxuan Wu; Yong-Wei Zhang; David J. Srolovitz; Julia R. Greer
The emergence of size-dependent mechanical strength in nanosized materials is now well-established, but no fundamental understanding of fracture toughness or flaw sensitivity in nanostructures exists. We report the fabrication and in situ fracture testing of ∼70 nm diameter Ni-P metallic glass samples with a structural flaw. Failure occurs at the structural flaw in all cases, and the failure strength of flawed samples was reduced by 40% compared to unflawed samples. We explore deformation and failure mechanisms in a similar nanometallic glass via molecular dynamics simulations, which corroborate sensitivity to flaws and reveal that the structural flaw shifts the failure mechanism from shear banding to cavitation. We find that failure strength and deformation in amorphous nanosolids depend critically on the presence of flaws.
Nano Letters | 2014
Rachel Liontas; X. Wendy Gu; Engang Fu; Yongqiang Wang; Nan Li; Nathan A. Mara; Julia R. Greer
We report fabrication and nanomechanical tension experiments on as-fabricated and helium-implanted ∼130 nm diameter Ni73P27 metallic glass nanocylinders. The nanocylinders were fabricated by a templated electroplating process and implanted with He(+) at energies of 50, 100, 150, and 200 keV to create a uniform helium concentration of ∼3 atom % throughout the nanocylinders. Transmission electron microscopy imaging and through-focus analysis reveal that the specimens contained ∼2 nm helium bubbles distributed uniformly throughout the nanocylinder volume. In situ tensile experiments indicate that helium-implanted specimens exhibit enhanced ductility as evidenced by a 2-fold increase in plastic strain over as-fabricated specimens with no sacrifice in yield and ultimate tensile strengths. This improvement in mechanical properties suggests that metallic glasses may actually exhibit a favorable response to high levels of helium implantation.
ACS Nano | 2015
Betar M. Gallant; X. Wendy Gu; David Z. Chen; Julia R. Greer; Nathan S. Lewis
The interfacial shear strength between Si microwires and a Nafion membrane has been tailored through surface functionalization of the Si. Acidic (-COOH-terminated) or basic (-NH2-terminated) surface-bound functionality was introduced by hydrosilylation reactions to probe the interactions between the functionalized Si microwires and hydrophilic ionically charged sites in the Nafion polymeric side chains. Surfaces functionalized with SiOx, Si-H, or Si-CH3 were also synthesized and investigated. The interfacial shear strength between the functionalized Si microwire surfaces and the Nafion matrix was quantified by uniaxial wire pull-out experiments in an in situ nanomechanical instrument that allowed simultaneous collection of mechanical data and visualization of the deformation process. In this process, an axial load was applied to the custom-shaped top portions of individual wires until debonding occurred from the Nafion matrix. The shear strength obtained from the nanomechanical measurements correlated with the chemical bond strength and the functionalization density of the molecular layer, with values ranging from 7 MPa for Si-CH3 surfaces to ∼16-20 MPa for oxygen-containing surface functionalities. Hence surface chemical control can be used to influence the mechanical adhesion forces at a Si-Nafion interface.
Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2017
X. Wendy Gu; Xingchen Ye; David M. Koshy; Shraddha Vachhani; P. Hosemann; A. Paul Alivisatos
Significance Polymer nanocomposites containing nanoparticle fillers often have enhanced strength, stiffness, and toughness that are highly dependent on nanoparticle spatial distribution, which can be challenging to control in the limit of high nanoparticle loading. Solid superlattices formed from close-packed, ligand-coated inorganic nanocrystals can have high stiffness and large elastic recovery, although nanocrystals interact solely through van der Waals forces. We use polymer-grafted nanocrystals to make superlattices with versatile structural architecture and dimensions to investigate the effects of structural defects, film thickness, and polymer length on mechanical behavior. We find that the elastic response of the superlattice is large even when the arrangement of nanocrystals within the superlattice is perturbed, and that polymer conformation plays a large role in determining mechanical properties. Large, freestanding membranes with remarkably high elastic modulus (>10 GPa) have been fabricated through the self-assembly of ligand-stabilized inorganic nanocrystals, even though these nanocrystals are connected only by soft organic ligands (e.g., dodecanethiol or DNA) that are not cross-linked or entangled. Recent developments in the synthesis of polymer-grafted nanocrystals have greatly expanded the library of accessible superlattice architectures, which allows superlattice mechanical behavior to be linked to specific structural features. Here, colloidal self-assembly is used to organize polystyrene-grafted Au nanocrystals at a fluid interface to form ordered solids with sub-10-nm periodic features. Thin-film buckling and nanoindentation are used to evaluate the mechanical behavior of polymer-grafted nanocrystal superlattices while exploring the role of polymer structural conformation, nanocrystal packing, and superlattice dimensions. Superlattices containing 3–20 vol % Au are found to have an elastic modulus of ∼6–19 GPa, and hardness of ∼120–170 MPa. We find that rapidly self-assembled superlattices have the highest elastic modulus, despite containing significant structural defects. Polymer extension, interdigitation, and grafting density are determined to be critical parameters that govern superlattice elastic and plastic deformation.
Nano Letters | 2012
X. Wendy Gu; Colleen N. Loynachan; Zhaoxuan Wu; Yong-Wei Zhang; David J. Srolovitz; Julia R. Greer
Extreme Mechanics Letters | 2015
X. Wendy Gu; Julia R. Greer
Nano Letters | 2013
X. Wendy Gu; Zhaoxuan Wu; Yong-Wei Zhang; David J. Srolovitz; Julia R. Greer
JOM | 2012
Julia R. Greer; Dongchan Jang; X. Wendy Gu
ACS energy letters | 2016
Xiaoxing Xia; Claudio V. Di Leo; X. Wendy Gu; Julia R. Greer
Journal of Physical Chemistry C | 2012
X. Wendy Gu; Nitzan Shadmi; Tohar S. Yarden; Hagai Cohen; Ernesto Joselevich