APS March Meeting 2011
Volume 56, Number 1
Monday–Friday, March 21–25, 2011;
Dallas, Texas
Session P14: Focus Session: Friction, Fracture and Deformation Across Length Scales II: Plasticity and Rupture
8:00 AM–11:00 AM,
Wednesday, March 23, 2011
Room: D227
Sponsoring
Units:
DMP GSNP DCOMP
Chair: Robin Selinger, Kent State University
Abstract ID: BAPS.2011.MAR.P14.4
Abstract: P14.00004 : Size Matters: size-dependent strength and nucleation-governed deformation mechanisms in nano-scale Cu pillars
8:36 AM–9:12 AM
Preview Abstract
Abstract
Author:
Julia Greer
(Caltech)
Uniaxial compression and tension tests on single
crystalline micro and nanopillars have revealed a strong size
effect. For face-centered cubic metals, this size effect is
characterized by a power-law: where $n$ is between .5 - .7. The
majority of these micro-mechanical tests have been performed on
pillars produced by the focused-ion-beam (FIB), a process known
to introduce surface damage into the material and to limit
the smallest attained pillar diameter to $\sim $150nm while
maintaining its shape integrity. In order to overcome these
detriments, we developed a new technique combining electroplating
and electron beam lithography to create
single crystalline Cu nano-pillars with diameters down to 50 nm.
We find the mechanical response of these samples to exhibit the
same power-law strengthening behavior as other fcc metals down to
the diameter of 100nm, as revealed by \textit{in-situ} uniaxial
compression and tension tests conducted in a
custom-built in-situ mechanical deformation instrument, SEMentor.
TEM investigations of the microstructure of pillars produced by
the FIB and by electroplating show similar initial dislocation
densities of $\sim$10$^{14}$ m$^{-2}$ implying that
size-dependent strength at the nano-scale is a strong function of
initial microstructure and not of fabrication method. We examine
the limits of this power-law trend down to diameters of
50nm, as at these small sizes, deformation behavior has been
theoretically predicted to change due to the activation of
surface dislocation sources and the increasing influence of the
surface stress. Furthermore, we find that these single
crystalline Cu nano-pillars show a remarkable strain-rate
dependence that increases with decreasing diameter further
revealing the thermally activated nature of dislocation sources
and corresponding changes in activation volume. HRTEM
investigations of post-mortem structures will be presented in the
context of dislocation-based phenomenological modeling.
To cite this abstract, use the following reference: http://meetings.aps.org/link/BAPS.2011.MAR.P14.4