Abstract

Nanocrystalline Cu-Ta alloys are emerging as a new class of structural materials preserving the nano-scale grain size up to the melting point of Cu. This extraordinary structural stability is caused by the strong pinning of grain boundaries (GBs) by Ta nano-clusters precipitating from the unstable solid solution after mechanical alloying. Many aspects of the Ta stabilization effect remain elusive and call for further experimental and simulation work. In previous atomistic computer simulations of stress-driven GB migration [JOM68, 1596 (2016)], the GB–cluster interactions in Cu-Ta alloys have been studied for several different compositions and GB velocities. The results have pointed to the Zener pinning as the main mechanism responsible for the grain stabilization. This paper extends the previous work to the motion of individual GBs driven by capillary forces whose magnitude is similar to that in real nanocrystalline materials. Both the impingement of a moving GB on a set of Ta clusters and the GB unpinning from the clusters are studied as a function of temperature and alloy composition. The results demonstrate a quantitative agreement with the Zener pinning model and confirm the “unzip” mechanism of unpinning found in the previous work. In the random Cu-Ta solid solution, short-circuit Ta diffusion along stationary and moving GBs leads to the nucleation and growth of new GB clusters, which eventually stop the GB motion.

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