Creation of low-energy twin lamellae for thermal stability in nanostructured materials

ORAL

Abstract

Intrinsic thermal instability of nanostructured metals have limited the applicability of these high-strength material systems. A novel stabilization route was discovered in these fine-grained systems when a high-density twin nano-lamella was introduced amongst nano-grain boundaries through SPD at cryogenic temperatures. The stabilization in such a composite microstructure was traced to the peculiar kinematic behavior of the twin-grain boundary triple junction. Copper was chosen as model material and deformed under cryogenic conditions using machining with varying deformation rates. The microstructure was investigated through HREM as a function of time and temperature. At small deformation rates, the SPD at cryogenic temperatures resulted in the creation of a nanostructured material with an unstable microstructure that coarsened even at room temperatures. At higher deformation rates under the same conditions, distribution of twin lamellae resulted in a thermally stable nanostructured material.

Authors

  • Christopher Saldana

    Purdue University

  • Tejas Murthy

    Purdue University

  • Ravi Shankar

    University of Pittsburgh

  • Srinivasan Chandrasekar

    Purdue University

  • Eric Stach

    Purdue University