TY - JOUR
T1 - Deformation evolution of Cu/Ta nanoscale multilayer during nanoindentation by a molecular dynamics study
AU - Wang, Junyi
AU - Shi, Junqin
AU - Lu, Yang
AU - Jin, Ge
AU - Wang, Jiahang
AU - Jiang, Yuxuan
AU - Zhou, Qing
N1 - Publisher Copyright:
© 2022
PY - 2022/7/15
Y1 - 2022/7/15
N2 - Molecular dynamics simulation of nanoindentation is performed to study the plastic deformation evolution of Cu/Ta and Ta/Cu nanoscale multilayers with effects of layer thickness and interface orientation relationship. The results reveal that the plastic deformation mechanism is determined by both the intrinsic property of monolayer and the interface characteristic, and the mechanical property has an important dependence on Ta deformation. The interface could strongly interact with and adsorb lattice dislocations, acting as the primary emission source of dislocations due to high stress concentration. The Cu/Ta interface exhibits a strong blocking effect obstructing dislocation traversing interface, while the Ta/Cu interface could transmit deformation stress to activate Cu layer deformation. The effect of interface orientation indicates that the propagation of crystal defects depends on slip system of monolayer, and the dislocation evolution in Ta layer shows a two-step mechanism: the V-shaped structure formation, and its cusp and root segments triggering the subsequently extended dislocations. Contrarily, the high-energy OT orientation interface causes random defect structures. The indentation hardness reveals two critical thicknesses (70 and 160 Å for Ta/Cu multilayer, 40 and 160 Å for Cu/Ta multilayer), which strongly depend on the size of indenter and indentation depth at nanoscale. This work provides an important understanding of the resistance of nanostructured materials to mechanical deformation for designing wear-resistant coatings and structural nanocomposites.
AB - Molecular dynamics simulation of nanoindentation is performed to study the plastic deformation evolution of Cu/Ta and Ta/Cu nanoscale multilayers with effects of layer thickness and interface orientation relationship. The results reveal that the plastic deformation mechanism is determined by both the intrinsic property of monolayer and the interface characteristic, and the mechanical property has an important dependence on Ta deformation. The interface could strongly interact with and adsorb lattice dislocations, acting as the primary emission source of dislocations due to high stress concentration. The Cu/Ta interface exhibits a strong blocking effect obstructing dislocation traversing interface, while the Ta/Cu interface could transmit deformation stress to activate Cu layer deformation. The effect of interface orientation indicates that the propagation of crystal defects depends on slip system of monolayer, and the dislocation evolution in Ta layer shows a two-step mechanism: the V-shaped structure formation, and its cusp and root segments triggering the subsequently extended dislocations. Contrarily, the high-energy OT orientation interface causes random defect structures. The indentation hardness reveals two critical thicknesses (70 and 160 Å for Ta/Cu multilayer, 40 and 160 Å for Cu/Ta multilayer), which strongly depend on the size of indenter and indentation depth at nanoscale. This work provides an important understanding of the resistance of nanostructured materials to mechanical deformation for designing wear-resistant coatings and structural nanocomposites.
KW - Cu/ta nanoscale multilayer
KW - Molecular dynamics
KW - Nanoindentation
KW - Plastic deformation mechanism
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=85130884122&partnerID=8YFLogxK
U2 - 10.1016/j.surfcoat.2022.128562
DO - 10.1016/j.surfcoat.2022.128562
M3 - 文章
AN - SCOPUS:85130884122
SN - 0257-8972
VL - 441
JO - Surface and Coatings Technology
JF - Surface and Coatings Technology
M1 - 128562
ER -