Breakdown of the Hall-Petch relationship in extremely fine nanograined body-centered cubic Mo alloys

被引:50
作者
Duan, F. H. [1 ]
Naunheim, Y. [2 ]
Schuh, C. A. [2 ]
Li, Y. [1 ]
机构
[1] Chinese Acad Sci, Inst Met Res, Shenyang Natl Lab Mat Sci, Shenyang, Peoples R China
[2] MIT, Dept Mat Sci & Engn, Cambridge, MA 02139 USA
基金
美国国家科学基金会;
关键词
Nanocrystalline materials; Hall-Petch breakdown; Refractory bcc alloys; Grain boundary; Deformation behavior; GRAIN-BOUNDARY SEGREGATION; ABRASIVE WEAR-RESISTANCE; MECHANICAL-PROPERTIES; NANOCRYSTALLINE METALS; PLASTIC-DEFORMATION; SHEAR BANDS; STRAIN-RATE; BEHAVIOR; STRENGTH; SIZE;
D O I
10.1016/j.actamat.2021.116950
中图分类号
T [工业技术];
学科分类号
08 ;
摘要
Mechanical properties and deformation behavior have been studied in face-centered cubic (fcc) metals with extremely fine grain sizes, even below about 20 nm, but this range is rarely studied in the body centered cubic (bcc) metals. Here, we study the hardness and deformation behavior of bcc Mo(O) alloys with grain sizes from 120 to 4 nm, covering the range of classical Hall-Petch behavior as well as the regime where that scaling law breaks down, between about 11 and 4 nm. A hardness as high as 17.3 GPa was achieved at the strongest grain size of 11 nm, and the breakdown at smaller grain sizes is associated with a number of changes in behavior: an inflection in activation volume (associated with a change in rate dependence of deformation) and increasing shear localization. At coarser grain sizes this is associated with shear offsets at grain boundaries, pointing to an increasing prevalence of intergranular deformation (by sliding or grain rotation). At finer grain sizes localization is associated with the formation of large shear bands at scales far greater than the grain size. These behaviors are suggestive of a crossover from crystal-like to glass-like deformation behaviors at the finest grain sizes, consistent with the increasing fraction of disordered regions in the structure. (c) 2021 Published by Elsevier Ltd on behalf of Acta Materialia Inc.
引用
收藏
页数:9
相关论文
共 56 条
[1]   Atom probe study of grain boundary segregation in technically pure molybdenum [J].
Babinsky, K. ;
Weidow, J. ;
Knabl, W. ;
Lorich, A. ;
Leitner, H. ;
Primig, S. .
MATERIALS CHARACTERIZATION, 2014, 87 :95-103
[2]   Grain size effect on radiation tolerance of nanocrystalline Mo [J].
Cheng, G. M. ;
Xu, W. Z. ;
Wang, Y. Q. ;
Misra, A. ;
Zhu, Y. T. .
SCRIPTA MATERIALIA, 2016, 123 :90-94
[3]   Experimental evidence for grain-boundary sliding in ultrafine-grained aluminum processed by severe plastic deformation [J].
Chinh, NQ ;
Szommer, P ;
Horita, Z ;
Langdon, TG .
ADVANCED MATERIALS, 2006, 18 (01) :34-39
[4]   Tailoring and patterning the grain size of nanocrystalline alloys [J].
Detor, Andrew J. ;
Schuh, Christopher A. .
ACTA MATERIALIA, 2007, 55 (01) :371-379
[5]   Influence of oxygen on the glass formation of Mo-O binary alloys [J].
Duan, F. H. ;
Lin, Y. ;
Pan, J. ;
Wang, Y. X. ;
Yao, J. H. ;
Li, Y. .
JOURNAL OF NON-CRYSTALLINE SOLIDS, 2018, 500 :210-216
[6]   Outstanding radiation resistance of tungsten-based high-entropy alloys [J].
El-Atwani, O. ;
Li, N. ;
Li, M. ;
Devaraj, A. ;
Baldwin, J. K. S. ;
Schneider, M. M. ;
Sobieraj, D. ;
Wrobel, J. S. ;
Nguyen-Manh, D. ;
Maloy, S. A. ;
Martinez, E. .
SCIENCE ADVANCES, 2019, 5 (03)
[7]   Grain boundary migration during room temperature deformation of nanocrystalline Ni [J].
Farkas, Diana ;
Froseth, Anders ;
Van Swygenhoven, Helena .
SCRIPTA MATERIALIA, 2006, 55 (08) :695-698
[8]   Demonstration of an inverse Hall-Petch relationship in electrodeposited nanocrystalline Ni-W alloys through tensile testing [J].
Giga, A. ;
Kimoto, Y. ;
Takigawa, Y. ;
Higashi, K. .
SCRIPTA MATERIALIA, 2006, 55 (02) :143-146
[9]   Shear bands in metallic glasses [J].
Greer, A. L. ;
Cheng, Y. Q. ;
Ma, E. .
MATERIALS SCIENCE & ENGINEERING R-REPORTS, 2013, 74 (04) :71-132
[10]   Grain-size dependent mechanical behavior of nanocrystalline metals [J].
Hahn, Eric N. ;
Meyers, Marc A. .
MATERIALS SCIENCE AND ENGINEERING A-STRUCTURAL MATERIALS PROPERTIES MICROSTRUCTURE AND PROCESSING, 2015, 646 :101-134