61 results on '"Z.H. Cao"'
Search Results
2. Laser additive manufacturing of strong and ductile Al-12Si alloy under static magnetic field
- Author
-
R. Wang, J. Wang, L.M. Lei, S. Yu, T. Hu, S.S. Shuai, S.Z. Xu, Z.H. Cao, X.P. Li, C.Y. Chen, and Z.M. Ren
- Subjects
Polymers and Plastics ,Mechanics of Materials ,Mechanical Engineering ,Materials Chemistry ,Metals and Alloys ,Ceramics and Composites - Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
3. Strain rate sensitivity of a 1.5 GPa nanotwinned steel
- Author
-
L. Lin, C.P. Huang, R.D. Liu, Z.H. Cao, Mingxin Huang, and Y. Z. Li
- Subjects
Materials science ,Strain (chemistry) ,Bowing ,Metals and Alloys ,chemistry.chemical_element ,Strain rate ,Sensitivity (explosives) ,Atmosphere ,Volume (thermodynamics) ,chemistry ,Mechanics of Materials ,Materials Chemistry ,Composite material ,Dislocation ,Carbon - Abstract
Two distinct regimes of strain rate sensitivity on yield strength are found in a high-strength nantwinned steel. The yield strength increases from 1410 to 1776 MPa when the strain rate increases from 10–3 to 1400 s−1. It is proposed from the measured small activation volume that the yielding of the nanotwinned steel at higher strain rates is governed by the dislocation bowing out from the carbon atmosphere. At lower strain rates, however, the yielding is controlled by the continuous re-pinning of dislocations due to the fast diffused carbon atoms, which leads to the relative insensitivity of yield strength to the strain rate.
- Published
- 2021
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
4. Improving the bending toughness of Al-Si coated press-hardened steel by tailoring coating thickness
- Author
-
Z.H. Cao, Mingxin Huang, Z. Wang, and Jianfeng Wang
- Subjects
010302 applied physics ,Toughness ,Materials science ,Mechanical Engineering ,Metals and Alloys ,02 engineering and technology ,Hot stamping ,engineering.material ,021001 nanoscience & nanotechnology ,Condensed Matter Physics ,01 natural sciences ,Hardened steel ,Brittleness ,Coating ,Mechanics of Materials ,Ferrite (iron) ,Martensite ,0103 physical sciences ,engineering ,General Materials Science ,Composite material ,0210 nano-technology ,Stress intensity factor - Abstract
A ferrite layer is formed between the outer intermetallics layers and the martensite substrate during the hot stamping process of Al-Si coated press-hardened steel (PHS). Unexpectedly, it is found here that the ferrite layer does not effectively prevent brittle cracks propagating continuously from the intermetallics to the martensite substrate. This leads to a high stress intensity factor (SIF) at the crack tip, therefore initiating highly localized shear deformation in the martensite substrate, degrading the bendability of the steel. A thinner Al-Si coating produces thinner brittle intermetallics and ferrite layers, and therefore shorter coating cracks and smaller SIF at the crack tip, thus improving the bendability. In addition, a thinner Al-Si coating also has a lower material cost while keeping similar paintability and corrosion resistance. The thin Al-Si coating could potentially change the current practice of Al-Si coating, impacting the global automotive industry.
- Published
- 2021
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
5. Strong and plastic metallic composites with nanolayered architectures
- Author
-
Z.J. Zhang, Haiyan Wang, Qiang Li, Zhe Fan, Xiangkang Meng, Yue Ma, Xinghang Zhang, Z.H. Cao, W. Sun, and Y.P. Cai
- Subjects
010302 applied physics ,Nanocomposite ,Materials science ,Polymers and Plastics ,Metals and Alloys ,02 engineering and technology ,Slip (materials science) ,Strain hardening exponent ,Plasticity ,021001 nanoscience & nanotechnology ,01 natural sciences ,Electronic, Optical and Magnetic Materials ,Strain partitioning ,Deformation mechanism ,0103 physical sciences ,Ceramics and Composites ,Hardening (metallurgy) ,Grain boundary diffusion coefficient ,Composite material ,0210 nano-technology - Abstract
Nanostructured metals and alloys are generally strong but lack strain hardening due to enhanced grain boundary diffusion and sliding. Here, equal nanograined (ENG) and gradient nanograined (GNG) layered Cu/Ta architectures were acquired by introducing a hard and stable “artificial” interphase boundary zone (IBZ). The ENG architecture produced uniform plastic strain reaching 70% and high yield strength exceeding 1 GPa, which is attributed to the constraint effect of the tough IBZ on dislocation slip mediated co-deformation. The GNG architecture exhibited a remarkable linear strain hardening with hardening exponent of 1 due to the strong strain partitioning between soft and hard layers. The dominant deformation mechanism of the GNG nanocomposite evolves from partial dislocation emission to dislocation accumulation at interface with increasing strain based on the results from experiments and molecular dynamics simulations. This finding demonstrates that heterostructure with “artificial” IBZ may offer an alternative approach to design strong and tough materials.
- Published
- 2020
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
6. Influence of Al doping and annealing on the microstructures and electrical properties of CrSi films prepared by magnetron co-sputtering
- Author
-
H. Ma, Y.J. Ma, X.T. Han, J.H. Chen, Z. Yang, S.W. Ta, Y.W. Zhang, Z.Y. Zhang, and Z.H. Cao
- Subjects
Condensed Matter Physics ,Instrumentation ,Surfaces, Coatings and Films - Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
7. High strength dual-phase high entropy alloys with a tunable nanolayer thickness
- Author
-
Y.P. Cai, Z.H. Cao, Yue Ma, Gengjie Wang, and Xiangkang Meng
- Subjects
010302 applied physics ,Work (thermodynamics) ,Materials science ,Mechanical Engineering ,High entropy alloys ,Metals and Alloys ,02 engineering and technology ,021001 nanoscience & nanotechnology ,Condensed Matter Physics ,01 natural sciences ,Amorphous solid ,Mechanics of Materials ,Phase (matter) ,0103 physical sciences ,General Materials Science ,Grain boundary ,Shear matrix ,Dislocation ,Composite material ,0210 nano-technology ,Softening - Abstract
In this work, we have synthesized dual-phase high entropy alloys (DP-HEAs) multilayers with a tunable layer thickness through a bottom-up approach. The DP-HEAs' multilayers reach the maximum hardness of 13.3 GPa at a critical thickness of 10 nm. The main strengthening mechanism is that dislocation movement is locked by both interior columnar grain boundaries and heterogeneous interfaces. A crystalline-to-amorphous transition occurs when layer thickness is below the critical thickness. The formation of amorphous DP-HEAs deformed by shear transformation zones with collective atomic rearrangement is responsible for the softening behavior.
- Published
- 2019
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
8. Ultrastable cyclic bending response of carbon nanotube/copper laminate composite film
- Author
-
Z.H. Cao, Y.P. Cai, Gengjie Wang, Yue Ma, and Xiangkang Meng
- Subjects
Materials science ,chemistry.chemical_element ,02 engineering and technology ,Bending ,Carbon nanotube ,Plasticity ,010402 general chemistry ,021001 nanoscience & nanotechnology ,01 natural sciences ,Copper ,0104 chemical sciences ,law.invention ,chemistry ,Mechanics of Materials ,Residual stress ,law ,Ceramics and Composites ,Grain boundary ,Thin film ,Composite material ,0210 nano-technology ,Ductility - Abstract
Nanostructured metal thin films have high strength and high electrical conductivity, but their fatigue resistance is relative low due to the weak plasticity and ductility deformed by localization at grain boundary or interface. Here we report a carbon nanotube/copper laminate composite film with ultrahigh fatigue resistance, which exhibits history-independent cyclic bending response. The high dense wrinkling of composite film becomes the dominant cyclic deformation behavior. The cracks initiation and formation are voided by the wrinkling process releasing the bending stress. The residual stress and resistivity of composite film no longer increase even if the number of cycle reaches as high as105. This result provides us a novel insight to design nanoscale metal films with ultrahigh fatigue resistance and superior service ability.
- Published
- 2019
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
9. Overcoming the strength-conductivity trade-off dilemma in carbon nanotube/aluminum-copper fibers by diffusion interface and chemical reaction interface
- Author
-
Xiangkang Meng, Yue Ma, Gengjie Wang, Y.P. Cai, and Z.H. Cao
- Subjects
Materials science ,Annealing (metallurgy) ,Contact resistance ,chemistry.chemical_element ,02 engineering and technology ,General Chemistry ,Carbon nanotube ,Sputter deposition ,engineering.material ,Conductivity ,010402 general chemistry ,021001 nanoscience & nanotechnology ,01 natural sciences ,Copper ,Nanocrystalline material ,0104 chemical sciences ,law.invention ,Condensed Matter::Materials Science ,Coating ,chemistry ,law ,engineering ,General Materials Science ,Composite material ,0210 nano-technology - Abstract
The carbon nanotube fiber has not shown its advantage and been widely used in many applications due to low conductivity. Depositing a metallic layer on the carbon nanotube fiber surface became an effective method. However, the strength of the carbon nanotube fiber decreases with increasing conductivity and coating thickness. Here, we deposited nanocrystalline metal coating on carbon nanotube fibers by magnetron sputtering. The coating consists of an ultrathin Al transitional layer and a Cu layer. After annealing, the Al atoms and Cu atoms diffused into the carbon nanotube fiber to form diffuse interface and chemical reaction interface, leading to the sliding resistance increase and contact resistance decrease between carbon nanotubes. As a result, the new composite fiber with a 2 μm thick Cu layer can exhibit a superhigh effective strength of 996 MPa and electrical conductivity of 2.6 × 107 S/m. This structure achieves both conductivity and strength increasing simultaneously.
- Published
- 2019
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
10. High hardness dual-phase high entropy alloy thin films produced by interface alloying
- Author
-
Y.P. Cai, Gengjie Wang, Xiangkang Meng, Yue Ma, and Z.H. Cao
- Subjects
010302 applied physics ,Equiaxed crystals ,Materials science ,Mechanical Engineering ,Alloy ,Metals and Alloys ,02 engineering and technology ,engineering.material ,Strain hardening exponent ,021001 nanoscience & nanotechnology ,Condensed Matter Physics ,01 natural sciences ,Condensed Matter::Materials Science ,Solid solution strengthening ,Atomic radius ,Mechanics of Materials ,Phase (matter) ,0103 physical sciences ,engineering ,General Materials Science ,Thin film ,Dislocation ,Composite material ,0210 nano-technology - Abstract
In this work, we present a tunable alloying strategy to prepare high entropy alloy (HEA) thin films with FCC/BCC dual-phase structure. The dual-phase HEA films consist of uniformly equiaxed grains with average size about 40 nm. Comparing with single-phase FCC HEA, the dual-phase HEA has higher hardness up to 10.4 GPa. The relative large atomic radius of Al leads to severe lattice distortion, resulting in a stronger solid solution strengthening behavior in the dual-phase HEA. Moreover, high dense heterogeneous phase interfaces effectively blocking dislocation motion enhance the strain hardening ability further.
- Published
- 2019
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
11. Tailoring strength and plasticity of Ag/Nb nanolaminates via intrinsic microstructure and extrinsic dimension
- Author
-
Yue Ma, Haiming Lu, Xiangkang Meng, Y.P. Cai, C. Sun, M.Z. Wei, Z.H. Cao, Xinghang Zhang, Haiyan Wang, and Qiang Li
- Subjects
010302 applied physics ,Materials science ,Mechanical Engineering ,02 engineering and technology ,Work hardening ,Plasticity ,021001 nanoscience & nanotechnology ,Microstructure ,01 natural sciences ,Amorphous solid ,Metal ,Shear (geology) ,Mechanics of Materials ,visual_art ,0103 physical sciences ,visual_art.visual_art_medium ,General Materials Science ,Grain boundary ,Deformation (engineering) ,Composite material ,0210 nano-technology - Abstract
Nanolayered metallic composites usually deform via a transition from homogeneous deformation to major shear banding with decreasing layer thickness, and thus the improvement of strength often sacrifices the plasticity of materials. Here, we show two methods to promote brittle-to-ductile transition in nanolayered Ag/Nb pillars. Intrinsically, while keeping the pillar diameter constant, the reduction of layer thickness can increase the strength of multilayers and suppress shear induced failure. Extrinsically, for a constant layer thickness, decreasing the diameter of pillar suppresses shear bands and promotes more uniform plastic deformation. Furthermore, the critical layer thickness at peak strength of multilayers increases monotonically with decreasing pillar diameter. Interface structures evolve from amorphous layer to coherent interface with reduction of layer thickness. Homogeneous co-deformation mediated by heterogeneous interfaces and columnar grain boundaries promotes a unique work hardening behavior. This study indicates that a combination of intrinsic and extrinsic size effect may enable the accomplishment of high strength and uniform deformation simultaneously.
- Published
- 2019
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
12. Enhanced thermal stability by heterogeneous interface and columnar grain in nanoscale Cu/Ru multilayers
- Author
-
Xiangkang Meng, Gengjie Wang, Mingjin Cui, Yue Ma, Y.P. Cai, C. Sun, and Z.H. Cao
- Subjects
010302 applied physics ,Materials science ,Annealing (metallurgy) ,Mechanical Engineering ,02 engineering and technology ,Nanoindentation ,021001 nanoscience & nanotechnology ,Condensed Matter Physics ,01 natural sciences ,Grain size ,Surface energy ,Metal ,Grain growth ,Chemical engineering ,Mechanics of Materials ,Transmission electron microscopy ,visual_art ,0103 physical sciences ,visual_art.visual_art_medium ,General Materials Science ,Thermal stability ,0210 nano-technology - Abstract
The thermal stability of nanoscale Cu/Ru metallic multilayers with different modulation ratio (a fixed Ru layer thickness of 3 nm and varied Cu layer thickness (h) from 10 nm to 200 nm) was investigated by transmission electron microscope (TEM) analyses and nanoindentation tests. All of the Cu/Ru multilayers retained the layered structures up to 400 °C annealing. The Cu grain growth slowed with Cu layer thickness decreasing, illustrating an unusual size dependence, that is, “smaller is more stable.” Especially the average grain size was maintained as small as 25 nm for the Cu/Ru multilayers with h = 10 nm and the hardness only decreased by 6.5% after 400 °C annealing, which exhibits an excellent stability. The enhanced thermal stability of Cu/Ru multilayers originates from the textured columnar grains and semicoherent heterogeneous interfaces, which have a low interface energy. The amount of textured columnar grains and semicoherent heterogeneous interfaces increase with the Cu layer thickness decreasing is responsible for the enhanced thermal stability of Cu/Ru multilayers.
- Published
- 2019
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
13. Ultrahigh strengthening effect induced by element addition in nanostructural (TiVCr)100−xWx medium entropy alloy
- Author
-
Z.J. Zhang, Y.J. Ma, X.T. Han, J.H. Chen, G.J. Li, H.Q. Shi, L. Wang, Z.H. Cao, and X.K. Meng
- Subjects
Mechanics of Materials ,Mechanical Engineering ,Materials Chemistry ,Metals and Alloys - Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
14. Intersectant coherent twin boundaries governed strong strain hardening behavior in nanocrystalline Cu
- Author
-
Weibin Sun, Yujie Ma, X.B. Yang, Z.H. Cao, Xiangkang Meng, and J.W. Zhao
- Subjects
Materials science ,Condensed matter physics ,Mechanical Engineering ,Crystalline materials ,02 engineering and technology ,Slip (materials science) ,Plasticity ,Strain hardening exponent ,021001 nanoscience & nanotechnology ,01 natural sciences ,Nanocrystalline material ,Molecular dynamics ,Nanocrystal ,Mechanics of Materials ,0103 physical sciences ,General Materials Science ,Lamellar structure ,010306 general physics ,0210 nano-technology - Abstract
Introducing parallel coherent twin boundaries (p-CTBs) is a high effective approach to material strengthening. However, it has been widely verified that the strengthening effect of p-CTBs reaches saturation at a critical twin lamellar thickness. In this work, we demonstrate by experiments and molecular dynamic simulations that the novel intersectant coherent twin boundaries (i-CTBs) involving Lomer-Cottrell (L-C) dislocation locks trigger off a strong strain hardening on nanostructured metal, which exceeds the strength induced by p-CTBs strengthening. A transition from strain burst to dislocation multiplication occurs as the p-CTBs turn into i-CTBs in nanoscaled single crystals. The i-CTBs with different orientations can significantly promote the formation of L-C dislocation locks inside a nanocrystal, reflecting an intrinsic correlation between the i-CTBs and the L-C dislocation locks. The unique strain hardening primarily originates from the synergistic strengthening effect of the i-CTBs blocking and the L-C locks pinning on the glissile dislocation slip. These findings provide the impetus for a new strategy to design high strength and high plasticity crystalline materials.
- Published
- 2018
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
15. Enhanced diffusion barrier property of nanolayered NbMoTaW/TiVCr high entropy alloy for copper metallization
- Author
-
H. Ma, Jiamei Chen, Z. Yang, Pengzhen Li, S.W. Ta, X.T. Han, M.J. Kai, Yujie Ma, and Z.H. Cao
- Subjects
Materials science ,Diffusion barrier ,Annealing (metallurgy) ,Mechanical Engineering ,High entropy alloys ,Metals and Alloys ,Microstructure ,Amorphous solid ,chemistry.chemical_compound ,chemistry ,Mechanics of Materials ,Transmission electron microscopy ,Silicide ,Materials Chemistry ,Grain boundary ,Composite material - Abstract
In this work, the single-layered amorphous NbMoTaW and multilayered amorphous NbMoTaW/TiVCr high entropy alloys were prepared to investigate the diffusion barrier performance. The microstructure and thermal stability of these samples were analyzed by X-ray diffraction, transmission electron microscope, and four-point probe method after annealing at different temperatures. In the single-layered structure, Cu silicide formed after annealing at 600 °C. The reason is that the amorphous NbMoTaW layer crystallizes during annealing, which causes the interdiffusion between Cu and Si through grain boundaries (GBs). However, the multilayered structure still maintains effective barrier performance as the annealing temperature is below 800 °C. Amorphous structure without GBs diffusion path, severe lattice distortion, and the high dense layer interface are responsible for the improved barrier property in the multilayered system.
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
16. Understanding hydrogen embrittlement in press-hardened steel by coupling phase field and hydrogen diffusion modeling
- Author
-
Y. Ngiam, Z.H. Cao, and M.X. Huang
- Subjects
Mechanics of Materials ,Mechanical Engineering ,General Materials Science ,Condensed Matter Physics - Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
17. Tuning length scale effect of hardness in Ag/Nb/Cu/Nb multilayers by Nb amorphous interlayer
- Author
-
M.Z. Wei, J.Z. Huo, C.C. Wang, Y.J. Ma, H.Z. Pan, Z.H. Cao, and X.K. Meng
- Subjects
Mechanics of Materials ,Mechanical Engineering ,General Materials Science ,Condensed Matter Physics - Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
18. Influence of co-existing medium Mn and dual phase steel microstructures on ductility and Lüders band formation
- Author
-
Cemal Cem Tasan, Mingxin Huang, Jian Lu, Z.H. Cao, and Z.Y. Liang
- Subjects
Austenite ,Materials science ,Polymers and Plastics ,Dual-phase steel ,fungi ,technology, industry, and agriculture ,Metals and Alloys ,Plasticity ,Strain hardening exponent ,Microstructure ,Finite element method ,Electronic, Optical and Magnetic Materials ,Ceramics and Composites ,Composite material ,Ductility ,Necking - Abstract
The mechanical property spectrum of steels can be expanded to new limits through combining the characteristic microstructures of different steel grades in a single steel. Here, we demonstrate this microstructural grading concept in a single steel sheet that possesses microstructures representative of two steel grades, i.e., the duplex medium Mn steel and the dual-phase steel, in the form of a multi-layered structure. This graded steel was produced by applying the surface mechanical attrition treatment to a duplex medium Mn steel with metastable retained austenite. The resulting graded steel collects the respective advantages of the two steels: high ductility of the former, and the Luders-band-free plastic flow of the latter. By carrying out systematic experiments and finite element simulations, we reveal that the suppression of Luders band formation in this graded steel is due to the high early-stage strain hardening rate of the dual-phase steel microstructure, which offsets the post-yield strain softening tendency of the medium Mn steel microstructure. The ductility, on the other hand, results from the transformation-induced plasticity effect of the medium Mn steel microstructure, which enhances the overall strain hardening rate and suppresses the necking of the dual-phase steel microstructure at large strain levels.
- Published
- 2021
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
19. Cyclic deformation induced strengthening and unusual rate sensitivity in Cu/Ru nanolayered films
- Author
-
C. Sun, Haiming Lu, Zhe Fan, Yujie Ma, M.Z. Wei, Z.H. Cao, and Xiangkang Meng
- Subjects
010302 applied physics ,Work (thermodynamics) ,Materials science ,business.industry ,Mechanical Engineering ,Effective stress ,Bauschinger effect ,02 engineering and technology ,Structural engineering ,Nanoindentation ,021001 nanoscience & nanotechnology ,01 natural sciences ,Amorphous solid ,Mechanics of Materials ,0103 physical sciences ,General Materials Science ,Composite material ,Dislocation ,0210 nano-technology ,business ,Nanoscopic scale ,Strengthening mechanisms of materials - Abstract
In this work, we have systematically investigated the effect of cyclic deformation on the strength and rate sensitivity of Cu/Ru multilayers with different individual layer thickness ( h ) by nanoindentation tests. It was found that cyclic deformation remarkably enhances the hardness of Cu/Ru multilayers comparing with the specimens by monotonic loading. The rate sensitivity ( m ) of multilayer exhibits an anomalous size dependence after nanoscale cyclic deformation. When h > 10 nm, the m linearly increases with increasing cycle number of loading-unloading ( s ). However, the m sharply decreases with increasing s when h m . An obvious Bauschinger effect is observed during cyclic loading, where the evolution of effective stress is consistent with the m . Cyclic deformation induced dislocation accumulation and arrays at the heterogeneous interface are the intrinsic plastic mechanism for the enhanced rate sensitivity. The formation of amorphous layers at the critical h is mainly responsible for the inverse size m .
- Published
- 2017
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
20. Length scale effect on the thermal stability of nanoscale Cu/Ag multilayers
- Author
-
Z.H. Cao, Xiangkang Meng, M.Z. Wei, Yujie Ma, and C. Sun
- Subjects
010302 applied physics ,Length scale ,Materials science ,Annealing (metallurgy) ,Mechanical Engineering ,Nanotechnology ,02 engineering and technology ,021001 nanoscience & nanotechnology ,Condensed Matter Physics ,01 natural sciences ,Atomic diffusion ,Grain growth ,Chemical engineering ,Mechanics of Materials ,Transmission electron microscopy ,0103 physical sciences ,General Materials Science ,Grain boundary ,Thermal stability ,0210 nano-technology ,Nanoscopic scale - Abstract
The annealing induced grain growth (GG) and heterogeneous interface evolution of Cu/Ag multilayers with individual layer thickness ( h ) varying from 5 to 50 nm were investigated by transmission electron microscopy (TEM). The results demonstrate that the thermal stability of Cu/Ag multilayers exhibits strong length scale dependence. For samples with h h ≥20 nm, w h ere the interfaces remain remarkably intact. The existence of a large number of grain boundaries (GBs) decrease the stability of multilayers, while more heterogeneous interfaces contribute to resisting atomic diffusion, inhibiting GG. The equilibrium is achieved by a competitive process between GBs diffusion and heterogeneous interfaces resistance. Moreover, the formation of annealing twins in multilayer also significantly improve the microstructural stability.
- Published
- 2017
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
21. Size dependent strain rate sensitivity transition from positive to negative in Ti/Ni multilayers
- Author
-
J. Shi, Z.H. Cao, and Jingui Zheng
- Subjects
010302 applied physics ,Length scale ,Materials science ,Condensed matter physics ,Mechanical Engineering ,Size dependent ,Nanotechnology ,02 engineering and technology ,Strain rate ,Plasticity ,Nanoindentation ,021001 nanoscience & nanotechnology ,Condensed Matter Physics ,01 natural sciences ,law.invention ,Amorphous solid ,Magazine ,Mechanics of Materials ,law ,parasitic diseases ,0103 physical sciences ,General Materials Science ,0210 nano-technology ,Layer (electronics) - Abstract
This work presents a length scale dependent strain rate sensitivity (SRS) transition from positive to negative in Ti/Ni multilayers with unequal thickness of individual layer. The multilayers exhibit distinct interfacial structure and no Ti-Ni amorphous intermixed layer between Ni and Ti layers. It can be found that the hardness first increases with strain rate at large modulation period (λ), showing a positive SRS. Subsequently, a tunable (positive to negative) size dependent SRS phenomenon occurs with further decrease of λ. The present negative SRS is attributed to deterioration of the plasticity with decreasing λ and at larger strain rate, which induces microcracks formation.
- Published
- 2017
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
22. Negative strain rate sensitivity of a Ti-8Al-1Mo-1V alloy with bimodal microstructure under quasi-static compression
- Author
-
Z.Y. Fan, Jürgen Eckert, Xiufeng Shi, J.W. Qiao, and Z.H. Cao
- Subjects
Materials science ,Mechanical Engineering ,Flow (psychology) ,Alloy ,02 engineering and technology ,engineering.material ,Strain rate ,010402 general chemistry ,021001 nanoscience & nanotechnology ,Condensed Matter Physics ,Compression (physics) ,Microstructure ,01 natural sciences ,0104 chemical sciences ,Mechanics of Materials ,engineering ,General Materials Science ,Sensitivity (control systems) ,Composite material ,0210 nano-technology ,Dynamic strain aging ,Quasistatic process - Abstract
The compression behavior of a Ti-8Al-1Mo-1 V alloy with bimodal microstructure has been studied in the strain rate range of 2 × 10-3 s−1-2 × 10-1 s−1. The strain rate sensitivity shows a positive–negative-positive changing tendency with increasing strain rate. Moreover, serrated flow behavior was found in the first two changing stages of the strain rate sensitivity. Dynamic strain aging caused by solute atom-dislocation interaction within ultrafine α/α' lamellae is proved to be responsible for the appearance of serrations as well as the negative strain rate sensitivity. The reasons for the other two stages of positive strain rate sensitivity have also been analyzed.
- Published
- 2021
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
23. The ultra-high enhancement of hardness and elastic modulus in Ag/Nb multilayers
- Author
-
J. Shi, Yujie Ma, Z.H. Cao, M.Z. Wei, and Xiangkang Meng
- Subjects
010302 applied physics ,Work (thermodynamics) ,Materials science ,Mechanical Engineering ,Stacking ,High density ,Modulus ,02 engineering and technology ,021001 nanoscience & nanotechnology ,Condensed Matter Physics ,01 natural sciences ,Hardness ,Layer thickness ,Lattice contraction ,Crystallography ,Mechanics of Materials ,0103 physical sciences ,General Materials Science ,Composite material ,0210 nano-technology ,Elastic modulus - Abstract
In this work, the hardness and elastic modulus were investigated in Ag/Nb multilayers with the individual layer thickness ( h ) ranging from 1 to 50 nm. The hardness increases with decreasing h , and the magnitudes of hardness of multilayers with h ≤5 nm are higher than that of either constituent. This ultra-high strengthening results from the coherency stresses and high density stacking faults in Ag layers. Meanwhile, the enhancement of elastic modulus is achieved due to the lattice contraction when h ≤20 nm, where the modulus values are higher than that of either constituent, showing a supermodulus effect.
- Published
- 2016
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
24. Length scale dependent alloying and strain-rate sensitivity of Ti/Ni multilayers
- Author
-
Yujie Ma, Z.H. Cao, Xiangkang Meng, J. Shi, M.Z. Wei, and L.J. Xu
- Subjects
Length scale ,Critical load ,Materials science ,Mechanics of Materials ,Annealing (metallurgy) ,Mechanical Engineering ,Diffusionless transformation ,Metallurgy ,General Materials Science ,Composite material ,Strain rate ,Nanoindentation ,Condensed Matter Physics - Abstract
In this paper, we prepared alloying Ti/Ni multilayers through changing modulation periods ( λ ) and subsequent annealing. Strain rate sensitivity of the multilayers was investigated by nanoindentation. It was found that the multilayer became full alloying with the highest value of hardness at λ =5.4 nm. Both the alloying degree and the corresponding hardness are remarkable dependent on λ . Only the multilayers accompanied by obvious stress-induced pop-in events exhibit negative strain rate sensitivity resulted from stress-induced martensitic transformation, while hardness of the other multilayers does not change with strain rate. In addition, the critical load for the first pop-in increases with strain rate, meaning that larger stress is needed to induce martensitic transformation at higher strain rate.
- Published
- 2015
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
25. Size dependence and associated formation mechanism of multiple-fold annealing twins in nanocrystalline Cu
- Author
-
Z.H. Cao, Guanjun Pan, W. Sun, L.J. Xu, Xiangkang Meng, M.Z. Wei, J. Shi, X.B. Yang, and J.W. Zhao
- Subjects
Materials science ,Polymers and Plastics ,Condensed matter physics ,Annealing (metallurgy) ,Metals and Alloys ,Grain size dependence ,Nanocrystalline material ,Grain size ,Electronic, Optical and Magnetic Materials ,Molecular dynamics ,Crystallography ,Transmission electron microscopy ,Ceramics and Composites ,Size dependence - Abstract
The formation mechanisms and grain size dependence of annealing coherent multiple-fold twins, such as twofold and fivefold twins, were investigated in nanocrystalline Cu with zero applied stress by a combination of transmission electron microscopy and molecular dynamics (MD) simulation. It was found that the formation frequency of twofold and fivefold twins with coherent twin boundaries (CTB) increases with decreasing grain size (d), reaching a maximum frequency at the critical size of 35 nm, followed by a reduction at d
- Published
- 2015
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
26. Anomalous Strain Rate Sensitivity of Nanocrystalline Ni Induced by Rolling Deformation
- Author
-
Xiangkang Meng and Z.H. Cao
- Subjects
Materials science ,Mechanical Engineering ,Metallurgy ,food and beverages ,Strain rate ,Nanoindentation ,Condensed Matter Physics ,Nanocrystalline material ,Stress (mechanics) ,Grain growth ,Mechanics of Materials ,General Materials Science ,Grain boundary ,Composite material ,Deformation (engineering) ,Dislocation - Abstract
The strain rate sensitivity of rolled nanocrystalline (NC) Ni was studied by nanoindentation. The grain continuously grows from 20 nm to 92 nm after rolling deformation. The stress driven grain boundary migration accompanied by dislocation emission leads to the grain growth. The strain sensitivity first increase and then decrease with the increased rolling strain, which has a similar variation of dislocation density in rolled NC Ni. The remarkable shift of rate sensitivity is attributed to the dislocation supported grain boundary mediated process.
- Published
- 2015
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
27. Multiple effects of Ni-rich precipitates in Ni–Ti–Al thin films
- Author
-
Guanjun Pan, Z.H. Cao, M.Z. Wei, J. Shi, Xiangkang Meng, and L.J. Xu
- Subjects
Materials science ,Precipitation (chemistry) ,Mechanical Engineering ,Metallurgy ,Alloy ,engineering.material ,Nanoindentation ,Condensed Matter Physics ,Deposition temperature ,Hysteresis ,Chemical engineering ,Mechanics of Materials ,Diffusionless transformation ,Phase (matter) ,engineering ,General Materials Science ,Thin film - Abstract
Phase transformation and mechanical properties of two distinct Ni-rich Ni–Ti–Al thin films deposited at various temperatures were investigated in this paper. It is found that phase transformation temperatures and hardness of the films obviously increase with growth of Ni-rich precipitates, and their phase transformation hysteresis decreases. Especially, martensitic transformation start temperature of the Ni 49.7 Ti 45.3 Al 5 films exceeds room temperature and increases by 20 °C, and the Ni 44 Ti 32 Al 24 Heusler alloy films show near-zero transformation hysteresis. Besides, hardness of the two films increases by 12.8% and 22%, respectively. The evolutions are caused by the growth of Ni-rich precipitates which strengthens the matrix. The precipitation would sharply consume Ni content of the matrix that changes phase transformation behavior from the Ni-rich to Ti-rich films.
- Published
- 2015
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
28. The enhanced strength and electrical conductivity in Ag/Cu multilayers by annealing process
- Author
-
M. Z. Wei, Z.H. Cao, Yue Ma, Xiangkang Meng, and J. Z. Huo
- Subjects
010302 applied physics ,Materials science ,Annealing (metallurgy) ,High conductivity ,Mechanical Engineering ,02 engineering and technology ,021001 nanoscience & nanotechnology ,Condensed Matter Physics ,01 natural sciences ,Layer thickness ,Grain growth ,Compressive strength ,Mechanics of Materials ,Electrical resistivity and conductivity ,0103 physical sciences ,General Materials Science ,Thermal stability ,Grain boundary ,Composite material ,0210 nano-technology - Abstract
In this work, the hardness, electrical resistivity and thermal stability of annealed Ag/Nb multilayers were investigated with individual layer thickness (h) ranging from 3 to 100 nm after annealing at 200–400 °C. For all scales multilayers, the hardness improves 6–16% whereas the electrical resistivity decreases 6–12% after annealing at 200 °C compared with those of as deposited state. At 300 °C, the enhancement shows layer thickness dependent due to the different interfacial structures. The hardness improves about 4–10% and the electrical resistivity decreases 11–28% for multilayers with h ≥ 10 nm. A good combination of high strength and high conductivity has been obtained in annealed Ag/Cu multilayer with h ≥ 10 nm when annealing temperature is not more than 300 °C. Both hardness and electrical conductivity are enhanced by annealing process. The improvement of electrical conductivity mainly comes from the reduction of grain boundaries due to the grain growth. The enhancement of hardness relates with the increment of twin boundaries, the compressive stress and the lack of dislocations after annealing process.
- Published
- 2020
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
29. Anomalous softening behavior in Ti/Ni multilayers with ultra-high hardness
- Author
-
Guanjun Pan, Xiangkang Meng, M.Z. Wei, Z.H. Cao, Jun Shi, and L.J. Xu
- Subjects
Materials science ,Mechanical Engineering ,Drop (liquid) ,Alloy ,Metallurgy ,engineering.material ,Nanoindentation ,Condensed Matter Physics ,Mechanics of Materials ,Phase (matter) ,Martensite ,Diffusionless transformation ,Indentation ,engineering ,General Materials Science ,Composite material ,Softening - Abstract
We utilize alloying of Ti/Ni multilayers to prepare Ti−Ni alloy films and investigate effects of modulation period ( λ ) on the alloying and mechanical properties. It is found that the annealed multilayers with the λ of 2.7–54 nm exhibit ultra-high hardness, far exceeding co-sputtering Ti−Ni alloy films, and the maximum hardness is found at λ =5.4 nm. Attractively, another anomalous hardness softening occurs at λ of 13.5 and 27 nm with increase of indentation depth besides the softening at λ =5.4 nm, which is simultaneously accompanied by the pop-in events including displacement jumps and sudden drop of load. The pop-in events are attributed to stress-induced martensitic phase transformation and the critical load for martensitic transformation increases with the decrease of λ .
- Published
- 2014
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
30. Anomalous plastic deformation in nanoscale Cu/Ta multilayers
- Author
-
Jun Shi, Guanjun Pan, M.Z. Wei, L.J. Xu, Xiangkang Meng, and Z.H. Cao
- Subjects
Work (thermodynamics) ,Phase transition ,Crystallography ,Materials science ,Mechanics of Materials ,Mechanical Engineering ,General Materials Science ,Composite material ,Condensed Matter Physics ,Layer thickness ,Nanoscopic scale ,Softening ,Strengthening mechanisms of materials - Abstract
This work presents a length-scale induced anomalous plastic deformation of Cu/Ta multilayers with individual layer thickness (h) varying from 1 nm to 100 nm. The hardness increases with decreasing h and reaches a maximum at 10 nm. A sharp softening has been observed when h is below 10 nm. Furthermore, the results show that the phases of Ta layers vary from the coexistence of α-Ta and β-Ta to single α-Ta as h decreases from 10 nm to 5 nm. The phase transition causes the variation of interface structures as well as the hardness of Ta layers and results in the anomalous decrease in hardness. The strengthening mechanisms at different length scales are discussed separately.
- Published
- 2014
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
31. Influence of electric field annealing on atom diffusion in Cu/Ta/Si stacks
- Author
-
Z.H. Cao, Lihua Yu, Lai-Guo Wang, Junhua Xu, T. Huang, and Xiangkang Meng
- Subjects
chemistry.chemical_compound ,Materials science ,Copper silicide ,chemistry ,Condensed matter physics ,Stack (abstract data type) ,Diffusion barrier ,Annealing (metallurgy) ,Electric field ,General Materials Science ,General Chemistry ,Activation energy ,Atomic physics - Abstract
In this letter, we present a quantitative analysis of the influences caused by an electric field annealing on interface atom diffusion in a Cu/Ta/Si stack at a range of temperatures 450∼650 °C. The results indicate that the external electric field has a remarkably accelerated effect on Cu atom diffusion in the Ta layer and the failure of Ta as the diffusion barrier. The preexponent D 0 and the activation energy Q for Cu atom diffusion in the Ta layer were both decreased with the application of an external electric field. The activation energy for electric field annealed stacks is 1.22 eV, which is lower than that for annealed stacks (1.58 eV). The accelerating effect is mainly attributed to the perturbation of the electric state of the defects in the interface and grain interior.
- Published
- 2013
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
32. Indentation Stress Relaxation Behavior in As-Deposited and Rolling Nanocrystalline NiFe
- Author
-
Xiangkang Meng and Z.H. Cao
- Subjects
Materials science ,Mechanical Engineering ,Alloy ,Metallurgy ,Dislocation multiplication ,engineering.material ,Nanoindentation ,Condensed Matter Physics ,Nanocrystalline material ,Mechanics of Materials ,Indentation ,Stress relaxation ,engineering ,Hardening (metallurgy) ,General Materials Science ,Deformation (engineering) - Abstract
The stress relaxation behavior of as-deposited and rolling nanocrystalline NiFe alloy was studied by nanoindentation tests. The results indicated that both the hardness and activation volume of rolling NiFe are larger than that of as-deposited samples. Furthermore, the hardness decreases with increasing indentation depth. The reduction of indentation stress during holding becomes much faster with decreasing the indentation depth. Dislocation density is remarkably enhanced by rolling deformation, leading to the hardening behavior. Dislocation multiplication and accumulation mediated process is believed to the dominant plastic deformation mechanism.
- Published
- 2013
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
33. Microstructural evolution and its influence on creep and stress relaxation in nanocrystalline Ni
- Author
-
Yuanshuai Huang, Xiangkang Meng, Z.H. Cao, K. Hu, and Lai-Guo Wang
- Subjects
Materials science ,Polymers and Plastics ,Metallurgy ,Metals and Alloys ,Microstructure ,Nanocrystalline material ,Grain size ,Electronic, Optical and Magnetic Materials ,Creep ,Indentation ,Ceramics and Composites ,Stress relaxation ,Deformation (engineering) ,Composite material ,Softening - Abstract
Indentation creep and stress relaxation tests were performed on rolled and annealed nanocrystalline (NC) Ni to study the influence of microstructure evolution on plastic deformation behavior. Dislocation density (ρ) increases with increasing rolling strain, reaching a maximum at 20% strain, followed by a decrease at larger strain. The ρ of Ni decreases significantly with increasing annealing temperature. Softening behavior is observed in NC Ni with grain size
- Published
- 2012
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
34. Improved diffusion barrier performance of Ru/TaN bilayer by N effusion in TaN underlayer
- Author
-
Lai-Guo Wang, Z.H. Cao, K. Hu, Qian-Wei She, and Xiangkang Meng
- Subjects
Effusion ,Diffusion barrier ,Chemistry ,Annealing (metallurgy) ,Bilayer ,Analytical chemistry ,General Materials Science ,Grain boundary ,Condensed Matter Physics - Abstract
Two bilayers of Ru/TaN with low N concentration and high N concentration (TaN L and TaN H ) were used to determine the effect of N effusion on the barrier property. The results show that Ru/TaN H bilayer exhibits a better barrier property, in which RuN existed even after annealing at 650 °C. The improved barrier property is attributed to the formation of RuN and N atoms stuffing in grain boundaries of Ru layer by sufficient effusion N atoms from TaN H during annealing.
- Published
- 2012
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
35. Strain rate sensitive stretchability and fracture behavior of nanocrystalline Cu films on flexible substrate
- Author
-
K. Hu, Xiangkang Meng, and Z.H. Cao
- Subjects
Strain energy release rate ,Materials science ,Mechanical Engineering ,Delamination ,Uniaxial tension ,Substrate (electronics) ,Strain rate ,Condensed Matter Physics ,Nanocrystalline material ,Fracture toughness ,Mechanics of Materials ,Fracture (geology) ,General Materials Science ,Composite material - Abstract
The strain rate dependent stretchability and fracture behavior of the polymer-supported Cu films was studied by uniaxial tension test. The crack spacing of the films is dependent not only upon the strain rate but also the thickness of the films. At a high strain rate, cracks parallel to loading direction are found to occur more easily in thicker film than thinner one. Delamination and crack along loading direct facilitate each other, accelerating the failure of films. The calculated energy release rate decreases with increasing strain rate, which can be used to explain fracture behavior of film/substrate.
- Published
- 2012
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
36. Inverse effect of thickness on the ductility in nanocrystalline Cu films
- Author
-
Xiangkang Meng, Z.H. Cao, and K. Hu
- Subjects
Materials science ,Mechanical Engineering ,Inverse ,Substrate (electronics) ,Tensile strain ,Condensed Matter Physics ,Nanocrystalline material ,Electrical resistance and conductance ,Mechanics of Materials ,Fracture (geology) ,General Materials Science ,Composite material ,Ductility ,Tensile testing - Abstract
The ductility of nanocrystalline Cu films with different thickness ranging from 40 nm to 600 nm was tested by uniaxial tension. The ductility of the films was determined by the changes of the statistical crack density and the electrical resistance with tensile strain. It was found that the ductility decreases with increasing the film thickness, exhibiting an inverse size effect compared to the previous results. The 40-nm-thick Cu films sustain strains up to 20% without cracks, while the 600-nm-thick Cu films fracture at only 5% with channel cracks. The effective interfacial bond strength between the films and the substrate is suggested to be responsible for the ductility of Cu films.
- Published
- 2011
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
37. Size-dependent rate sensitivity and plasticity of nanocrystalline Ru films
- Author
-
Y.L. Huang, Z.H. Cao, and Xiangkang Meng
- Subjects
Coble creep ,Materials science ,Condensed matter physics ,Mechanical Engineering ,Metals and Alloys ,Nanoindentation ,Plasticity ,Condensed Matter Physics ,Nanocrystalline material ,Grain size ,Crystallography ,Deformation mechanism ,Mechanics of Materials ,Indentation ,General Materials Science ,Grain boundary - Abstract
The rate sensitivity of hexagonal close-packed nanocrystalline Ru films was investigated by nanoindentation, which is found to be a function not only of grain size but also of indentation depth. The enhanced magnitude of the sensitivity is comparable to that of face-centered cubic nanocrystalline metals. Experimental results suggest that the interaction of dislocations with grain boundaries (GBs) and the diffusion along the tip–sample interface are the dominant mechanisms, whereas both GB sliding and Coble creep are ruled out as the rate-controlling deformations.
- Published
- 2010
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
38. A Strategy for the Maximum Fluorescence Enhancement Based on Tetrahedral Amorphous Carbon-Coated Metal Substrates
- Author
-
Zhenlin Wang, Fanxin Liu, Z.H. Cao, Jian Pan, and Chaojun Tang
- Subjects
Quenching ,Materials science ,business.industry ,Inorganic chemistry ,Substrate (electronics) ,engineering.material ,Surfaces, Coatings and Films ,Electronic, Optical and Magnetic Materials ,Amorphous solid ,General Energy ,Coating ,Amorphous carbon ,Electric field ,engineering ,Optoelectronics ,Physical and Theoretical Chemistry ,Surface plasmon resonance ,business ,Plasmon - Abstract
Recently metal-enhanced fluorescence (MEF) has been reported. However, the bare metal would always quench the emission if the separation between the fluorophore and metal is very close. In order to get maximum fluorescence enhancement, the key point is to allow the maximum local electric field of plasmonic substrate at the interface to be used, and at the same time the quenching should be efficiently reduced. We demonstrate for the first time that by coating with an ultrathin dielectric layer of tetrahedral amorphous carbon (ta-C), an optically transparent material in the visible, the metal nanostructures can be used to realize the maximum enhancement in MEF. This result can be attributed to the well control of two competitive mechanisms of the local field enhancement and quenching. It is found that a 10 A ta-C layer can modify plasmon resonance of the metal to produce a higher local electric field than uncoated metal and can also reduce the quenching. The coated metal substrate has higher mechanical stab...
- Published
- 2010
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
39. Ultrathin Diamond-like Carbon Film Coated Silver Nanoparticles-Based Substrates for Surface-Enhanced Raman Spectroscopy
- Author
-
Chaojun Tang, Z.H. Cao, Zhenlin Wang, Ling Chen, and Fanxin Liu
- Subjects
Silver ,Materials science ,genetic structures ,Diamond-like carbon ,Surface Properties ,General Engineering ,Metal Nanoparticles ,General Physics and Astronomy ,Nanoparticle ,Nanotechnology ,Surface-enhanced Raman spectroscopy ,engineering.material ,Microscopy, Atomic Force ,Spectrum Analysis, Raman ,Biocompatible material ,eye diseases ,Silver nanoparticle ,Amorphous carbon ,Coating ,Dielectric layer ,engineering ,General Materials Science ,sense organs ,Diamond ,Hydrogen - Abstract
We have demonstrated that by coating with a thin dielectric layer of tetrahedral amorphous carbon (ta-C), a biocompatible and optical transparent material in the visible range, the Ag nanoparticle-based substrate becomes extremely suitable for surface-enhanced Raman spectroscopy (SERS). Our measurements show that a 10 A or thicker ta-C layer becomes efficient to protect the oxygen-free Ag in air and prevent Ag ionizing in aqueous solutions. Furthermore, the Ag nanoparticles substrate coated with a 10 A ta-C film shows a higher enhancement of Raman signals than the uncoated substrate. These observations are further supported by our numerical simulations. We suggest that biomolecule detections in analytic assays could be easily realized using ta-C-coated Ag-based substrate for SERS especially in the visible range. The coated substrate also has higher mechanical stability, chemical inertness, and technological compliance, and may be useful, for example, to enhance TiO(2) photocatalysis and solar-cell efficiency by the surface plasmons.
- Published
- 2010
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
40. Barrier layer and annealing temperature dependent microstructure evolution of nanocrystalline Cu films
- Author
-
Haiming Lu, Xiangkang Meng, and Z.H. Cao
- Subjects
Crystallography ,Grain growth ,Materials science ,Annealing (metallurgy) ,Scanning electron microscope ,Transmission electron microscopy ,Analytical chemistry ,Grain boundary diffusion coefficient ,General Materials Science ,Condensed Matter Physics ,Microstructure ,Nanocrystalline material ,Grain size - Abstract
The effects of barrier layers and annealing temperature on texture variation, grain growth and void forming of nanocrystalline Cu films were investigated by X-ray diffraction, transmission electron microscope and scanning electron microscope (SEM). The variation in texture and grain size of Cu films with annealing temperature is different for Cu/Ti and Cu/Ta. The activation energies of grain growth of Cu films on Ti and Ta, respectively, are 19.7 and 23.4 kJ mol −1 , which are much closer to that of grain boundary diffusion of Cu. The average diameter of about 400 nm for surface voids of Cu/Ti is larger than that of Cu/Ta structure. Furthermore, both the electrical resistivity measurement and SEM observation imply that Cu/Ti rather than Cu/Ta structure tend to fail easier as annealing temperature exceed 400 °C.
- Published
- 2009
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
41. Nanoindentation creep behaviors of amorphous, tetragonal, and bcc Ta films
- Author
-
Z.H. Cao, P.Y. Li, and Xiangkang Meng
- Subjects
Amorphous metal ,Materials science ,Mechanical Engineering ,Metallurgy ,Nanoindentation ,Physics::Classical Physics ,Condensed Matter Physics ,Condensed Matter::Disordered Systems and Neural Networks ,Nanocrystalline material ,Amorphous solid ,Condensed Matter::Materials Science ,Tetragonal crystal system ,Creep ,Mechanics of Materials ,Condensed Matter::Superconductivity ,Indentation ,Grain boundary diffusion coefficient ,General Materials Science ,Composite material - Abstract
Nanoindentation creep tests were carried out at the maximum indentation load from 500 to 9000 μN to study the indentation size effect (ISE) on the creep behavior of amorphous, nanocrystalline (NC) bcc and NC tetragonal Ta films. For NC bcc and tetragonal Ta films, the creep strain rate e ˙ decreases and stress exponent n increases with enhanced peak loads or indent depth, and are therefore both indentation size dependent. However, an inverse ISE on e ˙ and n is found for amorphous Ta films. The difference of the ISE is attributed to the distinct creep deformation process. Several creep mechanisms including self-diffusion along the indenter/specimen interface, grain boundary diffusion and sliding, and dislocation climb have been introduced to interpret the ISE for NC Ta films. The inverse ISE on amorphous Ta films is explained by the shear transformation zone theory.
- Published
- 2009
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
42. Size-, Shape-, and Dimensionality-Dependent Melting Temperatures of Nanocrystals
- Author
-
P.Y. Li, Haiming Lu, Xiangkang Meng, and Z.H. Cao
- Subjects
Materials science ,Nanowire ,Nanoparticle ,Nanotechnology ,Molecular physics ,Surfaces, Coatings and Films ,Electronic, Optical and Magnetic Materials ,General Energy ,Octahedron ,Nanocrystal ,Tetrahedron ,Physical and Theoretical Chemistry ,Thin film ,Shape factor ,Curse of dimensionality - Abstract
On the basis of a model for size-dependent cohesive energy, the size, shape, and dimensionality effects on melting temperatures of nanocrystals are modeled in a unified form. The model predicts that the melting temperature Tm(D,d,λ) decreases with reducing size D and dimensionality d or increasing shape factor λ. For nanoparticles with the same D values, there is Tm(icosahedron) > Tm(sphere or cube) > Tm(octahedron) > Tm(tetrahedron). Moreover, the ratio of depression of Tm(D,d,λ) is about 1:2λwire:3λparticle for thin films, nanowires, and nanoparticles when D is large enough, for example, 6 nm. The model is found to be in accordance with available experimental, MD simulation, and other theoretical results for Au, Ag, Ni, Ar, Si, Pb, and In nanocrystals.
- Published
- 2009
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
43. Indentation size effects on the creep behavior of nanocrystalline tetragonal Ta films
- Author
-
Xiangkang Meng, Haiming Lu, Yichun Zhou, Y.L. Huang, Z.H. Cao, and P.Y. Li
- Subjects
Materials science ,Mechanical Engineering ,Metals and Alloys ,Nanoindentation ,Physics::Classical Physics ,Condensed Matter Physics ,Nanocrystalline material ,Computer Science::Other ,Stress (mechanics) ,Condensed Matter::Materials Science ,Tetragonal crystal system ,Creep ,Mechanics of Materials ,Condensed Matter::Superconductivity ,Free surface ,Indentation ,Grain boundary diffusion coefficient ,General Materials Science ,Composite material - Abstract
Nanoindentation creep tests were carried out at maximum indentation loads from 500 to 9000 μN to study the indentation size effects (ISEs) on the creep behavior of nanocrystalline tetragonal Ta films. The experimental results show that the hardness, creep strain rate and stress exponent are all indentation size-dependent. The ISE on the creep behavior is explained by grain boundary diffusion and sliding, and self-diffusion along the indenter/specimen interface and along the free surface of specimen.
- Published
- 2009
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
44. In situ transmission electron microscopy observations of the crystallization of amorphous Ge films
- Author
-
S. C. Tang, Peng Liu, Z.H. Cao, Xiangkang Meng, and Huaixian Lu
- Subjects
Diffraction ,Materials science ,Annealing (metallurgy) ,Kinetics ,Analytical chemistry ,Nucleation ,Physics::Optics ,General Chemistry ,Activation energy ,law.invention ,Amorphous solid ,Condensed Matter::Materials Science ,symbols.namesake ,law ,Condensed Matter::Superconductivity ,symbols ,General Materials Science ,Crystallization ,Raman spectroscopy - Abstract
The crystallization of amorphous Ge films has been studied as a function of annealing temperature between 400 and 700°C by in situ transmission electron microscopy (TEM). It is found that crystallization does not occur until the annealing temperature reaches 650°C, which is nearly 250°C higher than the crystallization temperature in previous reports. The high crystallization temperature and average crystal size obtained by in situ TEM are in agreement with those from Raman spectroscopy and X-ray diffraction measurement. The kinetics analysis indicates that homogeneous nucleation is the dominant crystallization mode and the activation energy is up to about 3.1 eV.
- Published
- 2008
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
45. Surface plasmon sensor with gold film deposited on a two-dimensional colloidal crystal
- Author
-
Jie Sun, Yuanyuan Li, Z.H. Cao, Zhenlin Wang, Li Wang, and Peng Zhan
- Subjects
Materials science ,business.industry ,education ,Surface plasmon ,technology, industry, and agriculture ,Analytical chemistry ,Nanoparticle ,General Chemistry ,Colloidal crystal ,chemistry.chemical_compound ,chemistry ,Monolayer ,Optoelectronics ,General Materials Science ,Polystyrene ,Surface plasmon resonance ,business ,Layer (electronics) ,Plasmon - Abstract
A sensor based on surface plasmon resonance (SPR) of plasmonic crystals fabricated via a colloidal-crystal-assisted templating method is studied. Plasmonic crystals are prepared by depositing a thin gold (Au) layer onto a two-dimensional array of polystyrene spheres self-assembled on a quartz substrate. The enhanced transmission as a result of the SPR of Au plasmonic crystals, which are immersed in different ambient liquids, are measured and compared with that of polystyrene (PS) microsphere templates of different sizes, both before and after removal of Au nanoprisms formed on the quartz substrate through pores among the spheres. It is found that the measured sensitivities exhibit a linear dependence on the refractive index of the surrounding medium and are linked to coupling effects between SPRs on the corrugated Au film and nanoislands. The feasibility of the SPR system in molecular monolayer detection is further demonstrated through a formation of alkanethiolate self-assembled monolayers on the Au film surface, which causes a 4 nm red-shift of the main SPR.
- Published
- 2008
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
46. Surface Energy and Melting Temperature of Elemental Nanocavities
- Author
-
Xiangkang Meng, Datong Ding, S. C. Tang, Z.H. Cao, and Haiming Lu
- Subjects
Cavity size ,Argon ,Materials science ,Melting temperature ,Analytic model ,Physics::Optics ,chemistry.chemical_element ,Molecular physics ,Surface energy ,Surfaces, Coatings and Films ,Electronic, Optical and Magnetic Materials ,Molecular dynamics ,Crystallography ,General Energy ,chemistry ,Nanometre ,Physical and Theoretical Chemistry ,Cohesive energy - Abstract
A model for size-dependent surface energy of elemental nanocavities is proposed in terms of size-dependent cohesive energy. It is found that the surface energy of elemental nanocavities increases with decreasing of the cavity size to several nanometers. The newly built model is validated to be in agreement with that based on some other theories. Moreover, an analytic model is developed to describe the size-dependent melting temperature of elemental nanocavities for the first time. The analytic results show that the melting temperature increases with decreasing of the size of nanocavities. The theoretical predictions confirm well to the available data of argon obtained by molecular dynamics simulations.
- Published
- 2007
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
47. Seasonal changes in soil labile organic carbon pools within a Phyllostachys praecox stand under high rate fertilization and winter mulch in subtropical China
- Author
-
Z.H. Cao, Zhihong Xu, Q.F. Xu, and P.K. Jiang
- Subjects
Total organic carbon ,Bamboo ,Forestry ,Management, Monitoring, Policy and Law ,engineering.material ,Bamboo shoot ,Agronomy ,Soil water ,engineering ,Environmental science ,Fertilizer ,Soil fertility ,Mulch ,Organic fertilizer ,Nature and Landscape Conservation - Abstract
Phyllostachys praecox is a favorite bamboo shoot species that has been widely planted in southern China. High rate of fertilization and heavy winter mulch have been a common practice to gain a good yield and better economic benefit. To get an insight into the effects of fertilization and winter mulch on soil labile organic carbon pools, a trial of different types and rates of fertilizers was conducted from May 2002 to April 2003. Soils in the mixed treatments with both mineral and organic fertilizers (treatments: 1-3) were generally more abundant in soil microbial biomass carbon (MBC) (P < 0.05) as compared with treatments of single mineral fertilizer (treatments: 4-6), with MBC for treatments 1 and 2 generally at maximal level and for treatments 4 and 5 at minimal level. The abundance of soil MBC increased with the rate of organic fertilizers applied. Soil MBC content was measured periodically during the year, with the highest in October and December 2002, moderate in August 2002 and February 2003, and the lowest in April 2003. Soil water-soluble organic carbon (WSOC) of all treatments was higher in the August and October, decreased in the December and February, and increased again in the April. It was found that the treatments with mixed mineral and organic fertilizers had much higher WSOC (P < 0.05), compared with the pure mineral fertilizer treatments. Soil WSOC increased with the amount of organic fertilizer applied. Winter mulch enhanced soil MBC and WSOC, and the ratios of MBC in the mulch treatments to non-mulched treatments were on average 1.60 and 1.52 in February and April 2003, respectively, while the corresponding ratios of WSOC were on average 1.39 and 1.73 in the February and April, respectively. The high rate of single mineral fertilizer application was not recommended in bamboo management. Both mineral and organic fertilizers would need to be applied for sustaining soil fertility and long-term bamboo production in subtropical China.
- Published
- 2006
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
48. High pseudoelasticity of nanoscale L21 phase–Ni43Ti38Al19 thin films
- Author
-
Z.H. Cao, Xiangkang Meng, M.Z. Wei, L.J. Xu, J. Shi, K. Hu, and Guanjun Pan
- Subjects
Materials science ,Mechanical Engineering ,Metallurgy ,Nanoindentation ,Condensed Matter Physics ,Grain size ,Nanocrystalline material ,Mechanics of Materials ,Sputtering ,Indentation ,Phase (matter) ,Pseudoelasticity ,General Materials Science ,Thin film ,Composite material - Abstract
Pseudoelasticity of nanocrystalline Ni 43 Ti 38 Al 19 thin films with thickness of 600 nm is investigated by nanoindentation. It is found that the films with grain size of 12–28 nm are composed of L2 1 –Ni 2 TiAl phases, Ni 3 Ti precipitates and few B2–NiTi phases. The films with the L2 1 phases exhibit prominent pseudoelasticity, which strongly depends on grain size and indentation depth at the nanoscale. The pseudoelasticity decreases gradually with increasing grain size and indentation depth; among them the highest pseudoelasticity recovery ratio reaches 92.7%. With decreasing the grain size from 28 to 12 nm, the hardness of the films increases initially and then decreases, showing an inverse Hall–Petch effect.
- Published
- 2014
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
49. Soil Quality Evolution After Land Use Change From Paddy Soil to Vegetable Land
- Author
-
Z.H. Cao, A.F. Li, Chaosheng Zhang, and J.F. Huang
- Subjects
Quality Control ,Environmental Engineering ,Soil salinity ,Nitrogen ,engineering.material ,Geochemistry and Petrology ,Soil pH ,Vegetables ,Water Movements ,Soil Pollutants ,Environmental Chemistry ,Fertilizers ,General Environmental Science ,Water Science and Technology ,food and beverages ,Agriculture ,Oryza ,Phosphorus ,General Medicine ,Eutrophication ,Hydrogen-Ion Concentration ,Soil quality ,Agronomy ,Soil water ,engineering ,Environmental science ,Fertilizer ,Surface runoff ,Surface water ,Environmental Monitoring - Abstract
A survey was done in 15 typical villages, 150 soil and 86 vegetable plant samples were taken in Jiaxin prefecture of the Taihu Lake region, northern Zhejian province. Results indicate that after 15–20 years land use changed from the paddy rice–wheat (or oilseed rape) double cropping system, to a continuous vegetable land has caused soil quality dramatic change. (1) Acidification: average soil pH was 5.4; about 61% of total samples were pH < 5.5. It was 0.9 units lower than 10 years ago with same upland vegetable cultivation and was 1.2 units lower than soil pH of paddy rice–wheat (or oilseed rape) rotation. (2) Fertilizer salt accumulation: the average salt content was 0.28%, among these about 36.2% of the total samples contained more than 0.3%. (3) Nitrate N and available phosphorus (P) over accumulation: on average it was 279 mg NO3-N/kg, and 45–115 mg P/kg. Nitrate N four times higher and available P 4–10 times more than it is in present paddy rice–wheat rotation soils respectively. This has caused wide concern because of possible groundwater and well drinking water pollution by leached nitrate N and the P losses to water by runoff from vegetable lands induce surface water eutrophication.
- Published
- 2004
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
50. Field Studies on32P Movement and P Leaching from Flooded Paddy Soils in the Region of Taihu Lake, China
- Author
-
Z.H. Cao, W. Ran, Qirong Shen, X.J. Xie, J.J. Yang, and C.Y. Yang
- Subjects
China ,Environmental Engineering ,Environmental pollution ,Soil science ,engineering.material ,Soil ,Hydraulic conductivity ,Risk Factors ,Water Supply ,Geochemistry and Petrology ,Water Movements ,Environmental Chemistry ,Water Pollutants ,Leaching (agriculture) ,General Environmental Science ,Water Science and Technology ,Topsoil ,Agriculture ,Oryza ,Phosphorus ,General Medicine ,Leaching model ,Agronomy ,engineering ,Paddy field ,Environmental science ,Fertilizer ,Groundwater ,Environmental Monitoring - Abstract
Field experiments were done in two sites, Yixing and Changshu, Jiangsu province, China, to study P movement and leaching in flooded paddy soils. P movement in soil was investigated by using the KH2 32PO4 tracker method, and the amount of P leached from the soil layer in different depths was estimated by measuring P concentrations in the soil solution and saturated hydraulic conductivities in field. Determination was done about one month after P application. There was 46% and 42% of total 32P retained in the 0-5cm layer of soil in the Yixing site and in the Changshu site respectively. The 32P retained in the 25-30 cm layer was only about 1-2% of the total 32P added. Furthermore, 8.01% of 32P in the soil of Yixing site and 16.8% of 32P in the soil of Changshu site was lost from the layer 0-30 cm soil. The seasonal amounts of P leached from the top soil layer and from bottom layer are about 4.5-5.8% and 1.6-2.1% of the total P application, respectively. Changes of total P concentrations in soil solutions during rice growth showed that the fertilizer P applied before flooding of the paddy fields suffered a flash leaching loss and a slow leaching loss. We concluded that the fertilizer P could quickly move in the flooded paddy rice field and parts of it can enter into surface water and ground water. Unless the P application is well managed the risk of P loss and consequently environmental pollution exist.
- Published
- 2004
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
Catalog
Discovery Service for Jio Institute Digital Library
For full access to our library's resources, please sign in.