Strain Hardening and Size Effect in Five-fold Twinned
Ag Nanowires
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Abstract
Metallic
nanowires usually exhibit ultrahigh strength but low tensile ductility
owing to their limited strain hardening capability. Here we study
the unique strain hardening behavior of the five-fold twinned Ag nanowires
by nanomechanical testing and atomistic modeling. In situ tensile
tests within a scanning electron microscope revealed strong strain
hardening behavior of the five-fold twinned Ag nanowires. Molecular
dynamics simulations showed that such strain hardening was critically
controlled by twin boundaries and pre-existing defects. Strain hardening
was size dependent; thinner nanowires achieved more hardening and
higher ductility. The size-dependent strain hardening was found to
be caused by the obstruction of surface-nucleated dislocations by
twin boundaries. Our work provides mechanistic insights into enhancing
the tensile ductility of metallic nanostructures by engineering the
internal interfaces and defects