Sintering mechanism of Ag nanoparticle-nanoflake: a molecular dynamics simulation
SZ Li and Y Liu and HY Ye and X Liu and FL Sun and XJ Fan and GQ Zhang, JOURNAL OF MATERIALS RESEARCH AND TECHNOLOGY-JMR&T, 16, 640-655 (2022).
DOI: 10.1016/j.jmrt.2021.12.029
This paper studied the behaviors of sintering between Ag nanoparticle (NP) and nanoflake (NF) in the same size by molecular dynamics simulation. Before the sintering simulation, the melting simulation of NF was carried out to calculate the melting points of NFs and investigate the thermostability of NF. The Lindemann index and potential energy showed that the melting points of NF were significantly size- dependent. During the heating process, the sharp corner of NF transformed to the round corner and could bend spontaneously lower than melting points. In sintering simulation, the sintering process of NF-NP showed a metastable stage before equilibrium. Under low sintering temperature (500 K), the degree of plasticity sintering mechanism of NF- NP was more prominent, which generated more defects, such as amorphous atoms, dislocations, and stacking faults, than NP-NP. The sintered products of NF-NP also presented a better neck size and shrinkage than NP-NP in the same size. A new sintering behavior was observed: NF was bent toward the NP during the sintering. The bending curvature of NF increased as the thickness or the length/width decreased. For the NF with the ratio of length/width to thickness of 5:1, bending could further significantly facilitate neck growth. At 700 K, the plasticity mechanism dominated both the sintering processes of NF-NP and NP-NP. And NF-NP showed a larger diffusivity than NP-NP. At last, we investigated the effects of crystal misorientation, and found that a tilted grain boundary generated in the neck. The NF had the trend of rotation to decrease the crystal misorientation. (c) 2021 The Author(s). Published by Elsevier B.V. This is an open access article under the CC BY-NC-ND license (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/4.0/).
Return to Publications page