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Ultralong one-dimensional plastic zone created in aluminum underneath a nanoscale indent

  • Zhi Yu Nie
  • , Yuji Sato
  • , Shigenobu Ogata
  • , Maria Jazmin Duarte
  • , Gerhard Dehm
  • , Ju Li
  • , Evan Ma
  • , De Gang Xie
  • , Zhi Wei Shan
  • Xi'an Jiaotong University
  • The University of Tokyo
  • The University of Osaka
  • Max Planck Institute for Iron Research
  • Massachusetts Institute of Technology

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

25 Scopus citations

Abstract

Nanoindentation on crystalline materials is generally believed to generate a three-dimensional plastic zone, which has a semi-spherical shape with a diameter no larger than a few times the indentation depth. Here, by observing nanoindentation on aluminum in situ inside a transmission electron microscope, we demonstrate that three-dimensional plasticity dominated by regular dislocations triumph as the contact size upon yielding increases above ∼100 nm. However, when the contact diameter is less than ∼50 nm, a narrow and long (hereafter referred to as “one dimensional”) plastic zone can be created in front of the tip, as the indenter successively injects prismatic dislocation loops/helices into the crystal. Interestingly, this one-dimensional plastic zone can penetrate up to 150 times the indentation depth, far beyond the prediction given by the Nix-Gao model. Our findings shed new light on understanding the dislocation behavior during nanoscale contact. The experimental method also provides a potentially novel way to interrogate loop-defect interactions, and to create periodic loop arrays at precise positions for the modification of properties (e.g., strengthening).

Original languageEnglish
Article number117944
JournalActa Materialia
Volume232
DOIs
StatePublished - 15 Jun 2022

Keywords

  • Dislocation structure
  • In situ TEM
  • Incipient plasticity
  • Indentation size effect
  • Nanoindentation

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