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Download fileAtomistic Simulation of the Rate-Dependent Ductile-to-Brittle Failure Transition in Bicrystalline Metal Nanowires
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posted on 2018-01-03, 00:00 authored by Weiwei Tao, Penghui Cao, Harold S. ParkThe
mechanical properties and plastic deformation mechanisms of
metal nanowires have been studied intensely for many years. One of
the important yet unresolved challenges in this field is to bridge
the gap in properties and deformation mechanisms reported for slow
strain rate experiments (∼10–2 s–1), and high strain rate molecular dynamics (MD) simulations (∼108 s–1) such that a complete understanding
of strain rate effects on mechanical deformation and plasticity can
be obtained. In this work, we use long time scale atomistic modeling
based on potential energy surface exploration to elucidate the atomistic
mechanisms governing a strain-rate-dependent incipient plasticity
and yielding transition for face centered cubic (FCC) copper and silver
nanowires. The transition occurs for both metals with both pristine
and rough surfaces for all computationally accessible diameters (<10
nm). We find that the yield transition is induced by a transition
in the incipient plastic event from Shockley partials nucleated on
primary slip systems at MD strain rates to the nucleation of planar
defects on non-Schmid slip planes at experimental strain rates, where
multiple twin boundaries and planar stacking faults appear in copper
and silver, respectively. Finally, we demonstrate that, at experimental
strain rates, a ductile-to-brittle transition in failure mode similar
to previous experimental studies on bicrystalline silver nanowires
is observed, which is driven by differences in dislocation activity
and grain boundary mobility as compared to the high strain rate case.