Mechanical properties and scaling laws of nanoporous gold

XY Sun and GK Xu and XY Li and XQ Feng and HJ Gao, JOURNAL OF APPLIED PHYSICS, 113, 023505 (2013).

DOI: 10.1063/1.4774246

Nanoporous metals are a class of novel nanomaterials with potential applications in many fields such as sensing, catalysis, and fuel cells. The present paper is aimed to investigate atomic mechanisms associated with the uniaxial tensile deformation behavior of nanoporous gold. A phase field method is adopted to generate the bicontinuous open-cell porous microstructure of the material. Molecular dynamics simulations then reveal that the uniaxial tensile deformation in such porous materials is accompanied by an accumulation of stacking faults in ligaments along the loading direction and their junctions with neighboring ligaments, as well as the formation of Lomer-Cottrell locks at such junctions. The tensile strain leads to progressive necking and rupture of some ligaments, ultimately resulting in failure of the material. The simulation results also suggest scaling laws for the effective Young's modulus, yield stress, and ultimate strength as functions of the relative mass density and average ligament size in the material. (C) 2013 American Institute of Physics. http://dx.doi.org/10.1063/1.4774246

Return to Publications page