Nanocrystalline nickel (8-28 nm) deposits were produced by direct and pulse current electrodeposition. The microhardness and microstrains in the deposits were estimated. Tribological testing indicated that the coefficient of friction (COF) for nanocrystalline nickel was almost half that of polycryst
Sample-size effects in the yield behavior of nanocrystalline nickel
โ Scribed by A. Rinaldi; P. Peralta; C. Friesen; K. Sieradzki
- Publisher
- Elsevier Science
- Year
- 2008
- Tongue
- English
- Weight
- 676 KB
- Volume
- 56
- Category
- Article
- ISSN
- 1359-6454
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โฆ Synopsis
The compressive plastic strength of nanometer-scale single-crystal metallic pillars is larger than that found in conventionally sized samples. This behavior is generally associated with a change in the length scale that determines plastic behavior and the consequent inability of nanoscale samples to store dislocations. Here, we show in the case of nanocrystalline nickel pillars, for which there is a fixed microstructural length scale set by the grain size, that smaller is still stronger and find that this behavior derives from statistical expectations that have long been used to understand the size-dependent strength of brittle solids such as glass.
๐ SIMILAR VOLUMES
In recent literature related to mechanical testing of small-volume metal specimens, plastic strain bursts during apparent elastic loading have been reported for materials commonly known to exhibit smooth yielding. Interpretation of the observed plastic yielding effects in these tests have ignored a
Nanocrystalline nickel coating was synthesized by direct current electrodeposition from a Watts bath at the current density of 100 mA/cm 2 and pH = 4. The effect of saccharin addition (0-10 g/l) and bath temperature (45-65 ยฐC) on the average grain size of the deposits was investigated by XRD techniq