Abstract

The ability to precisely control the surface state of a nanostructure may offer a pathway towards tuning the mechanical properties of small-scale metallic components. In our previous work [Jennings et al., Acta Mater. 60 (2012) 3444–3455], single-crystalline Cu nanopillars were conformally coated with a 5–25nm thick layer of TiO2/Al2O3. Uniaxial compression tests revealed two key findings associated with these passivated samples: (i) ∼80% higher strengths as compared with the uncoated samples of the same diameter, 200nm; and (ii) Bauschinger effect-like hysteresis during unloading–reloading segments. Dislocation dynamics simulations of uniaxially compressed 200nm diameter Cu nanopillars with coated surfaces revealed the contribution of dislocation multiplication, pinning, and pile-up processes to the experimentally observed enhancement in pillar strength. They further helped explain the transition of plasticity mechanisms from dislocation multiplication via the operation of single-arm dislocation sources to dislocation nucleation from the crystal-coating interface. Hysteresis in stress–strain data is discussed in the framework of dislocation structure evolution during unloading–reloading cycles in experiments and simulations.

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