Deformation Mechanisms in Nanotwinned Tungsten Nanopillars: Effects of Coherent Twin Boundary Spacing
SZ Xu and SZ Chavoshi and YQ Su, PHYSICA STATUS SOLIDI-RAPID RESEARCH LETTERS, 12, 1700399 (2018).
DOI: 10.1002/pssr.201700399
Nano-scale coherent twin boundaries (CTBs) significantly alter the mechanical and electrical properties of metallic materials. Despite a number of studies of the nanotwinned nanopillars in face-centered cubic metals, investigations of them in body-centered cubic (BCC) systems are rare. In this Letter, we explore the uniaxial deformation mechanisms of BCC tungsten nanopillars containing nano-scale 112 CTBs using molecular dynamics (MD) simulations. Our work reveals a novel tension- compression asymmetric stress-strain response and deformation behavior, in conjunction with the effects of CTB spacing. With a relatively large CTB spacing, the plastic deformation in nanotwinned nanopillars is mainly controlled by dislocation nucleation from surface/CTB intersections, gliding on distant and adjacent slip planes under tensile and compressive loading, respectively; as a result, the tensile yield stress is almost invariant with respect to the CTB spacing, while the compressive yield stress increases with a decreasing CTB spacing. As the CTB spacing reduces to 1nm, detwinning, exhibited by annihilation of 112 twin layers as a result of partial dislocations gliding on CTBs, is observed in both tension and compression; at higher strains, however, 111 incoherent twin boundaries, whose resistance to cracking contributes to strain hardening, are formed under tensile loading but not under compressive loading.
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