Sutrakar, Vijay Kumar and Mahapatra, Roy D (2011) Designing copper-zirconium based nanowires for improving yield strength and plasticity by configuring surface atoms. In: Journal of Nanoparticle Research, 13 (12). pp. 6907-6918.
PDF
Designing_copper.pdf - Published Version Restricted to Registered users only Download (1MB) | Request a copy |
Abstract
Epitaxial-Bain-Path and Uniaxial-Bain-Path studies reveal that a B2-CuZr nanowire with Zr atoms on the surface is energetically more stable compared to a B2-CuZr nanowire with Cu atoms on the surface. Nanowires of cross-sectional dimensions in the range of similar to 20-50 are considered. Such stability is also correlated with the initial state of stress in the nanowires. It is also demonstrated here that a more stable structure, i.e., B2-CuZr nanowire with Zr atoms at surface shows improved yield strength compared to B2-CuZr nanowire with Cu atoms at surface site, over range of temperature under both the tensile and the compressive loadings. Nearly 18% increase in the average yield strength under tensile loading and nearly 26% increase in the averaged yield strength under compressive loading are observed for nanowires with various cross-sectional dimensions and temperatures. It is also observed that the B2-CuZr nanowire with Cu atom at the surface site shows a decrease in failure/plastic strain with an increase in temperature. On the other hand, B2-CuZr nanowires with Zr at the surface site shows an improvement in failure/plastic strain, specially at higher temperature as compared to the B2-CuZr nanowires which are having Cu atoms at the surface site. Finally, a possible design methodology for an energetically stable nano-structure with improved thermo-mechanical properties via manipulating the surface atom configuration is proposed.
Item Type: | Journal Article |
---|---|
Publication: | Journal of Nanoparticle Research |
Publisher: | Springer |
Additional Information: | Copyright of this article belongs to Springer. |
Keywords: | Alloy design;Brittleness and ductility;Phase transformation; Elastic properties;Modeling and simulation;Atomistic |
Department/Centre: | Division of Mechanical Sciences > Aerospace Engineering(Formerly Aeronautical Engineering) |
Date Deposited: | 30 Jan 2012 08:58 |
Last Modified: | 30 Jan 2012 08:58 |
URI: | http://eprints.iisc.ac.in/id/eprint/43165 |
Actions (login required)
View Item |