Deformation micromechanisms of ZnO single crystals as determined from spherical nanoindentation stress-strain curves

被引:0
|
作者
Basu S. [1 ]
Barsoum M.W. [1 ]
机构
[1] Department of Materials Science and Engineering, Drexel University, Philadelphia
来源
J Mater Res | 2007年 / 9卷 / 2470-2477期
关键词
Zinc oxide;
D O I
10.1557/jmr.2007.0305
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学科分类号
摘要
In this work, instrumented nanoindentation experiments with two spherical tips with radii of 13.5 and 1 μm were used to explore the deformation behavior of ZnO single crystals with two orientations, C (basal) and A (prism). By converting the nanoindentation load-displacement data to stress-strain curves, we show that the main reason the hardening rates are higher for the C plane than they are for the A plane is the activation of dislocations - with widely different flow stresses - on different sets of slip planes. For the former, glide occurs on basal planes as well as pyramidal planes; for the latter, glide occurs predominantly on basal planes. The C plane is roughly twice as hard as the A plane, probably due to the orientation of basal planes with respect to the indentation axis. A Weibull statistical analysis of the pop-in stresses indicates that the inherent defect concentration at or near the surface is the main factor for the initiation of plastic deformation. The strain energy released when the pop-ins occur determines their extent. The elastic moduli values, determined by Berkovich nanoindentation, are 135 ± 3 GPa and 144 ± 4 GPa for the C and A planes, respectively. In the C orientation repeated indentations to the same stress result in fully reversible hysteretic loops that are attributed to the formation of incipient kink bands. © 2007 Materials Research Society.
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页码:2470 / 2477
页数:7
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