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Mechanical Properties of Silicon Carbide Nanowires: Effect of Size-Dependent Defect Density
This paper reports quantitative mechanical
characterization of
silicon carbide (SiC) nanowires (NWs) via in situ tensile tests inside
scanning electron microscopy using a microelectromechanical system.
The NWs are synthesized using the vapor–liquid–solid
process with growth direction of ⟨111⟩. They consist
of three types of structures, pure face-centered cubic (3C) structure,
3C structure with an inclined stacking fault (SF), and highly defective
structure, in a periodic fashion along the NW length. The SiC NWs
are found to deform linear elastically until brittle fracture. Their
fracture origin is identified in the 3C structures with inclined SFs,
rather than the highly defective structures. The fracture strength
increases as the NW diameter decreases from 45 to 17 nm, approaching
the theoretical strength of 3C SiC. The size effect on fracture strength
of SiC NWs is attributed to the size-dependent defect density rather
than the surface effect that is dominant for single crystalline NWs