Abstract

Porous materials with ligament sizes in the submicrometer to nanometer regime have a high potential for future applications such as catalysts, actuators, or radiation tolerant materials, which require properties like high strength-to-weight ratio, high surface-to-volume ratio, or large interface density as for radiation tolerance. The objective of this work was to manufacture ultra-fine porous copper, to determine the thermo-mechanical properties, and to elucidate the deformation behavior at room as well as elevated temperatures via nanoindentation. The experimental approach for manufacturing the foam structures used high pressure torsion, subsequent heat treatments, and selective dissolution. Nanoindentation at different temperatures was successfully conducted on the ultra-fine porous copper, showing a room temperature hardness of 220 MPa. During high temperature experiments, oxidation of the copper occurred due to the high surface area. A model, taking into account the mechanical properties of the copper oxides formed during the test, to describe the measured mechanical properties in dependence on the proceeding oxidation was developed. The strain rate sensitivity of the copper foam at room temperature was ∼0.03 and strongly correlated with the strain rate sensitivity of ultra-fine grained bulk copper. Although oxidation occurred near the surface, the rate-controlling process was still the deformation of the underlying copper. An increase in the strain rate sensitivity was observed, comparably to that of ultra-fine-grained copper, which can be linked to thermally activated processes at grain boundaries. Important insights into the effects of oxidation on the deformation behavior were obtained by assessing the activation volume. Oxidation of the ultra-fine porous copper foam, thereby hindering dislocations to exit to the surface, resulted in a pronounced reduction of the apparent activation volume from ~800 to ~50 b 3, as also typical for ultra-fine grained materials.

Highlights

  • Nanoporous or ultra-fine porous materials are enormously interesting for a number of future applications due to many excellent properties including: high surface-to-volume ratio, high strength-to-weight ratio, and electrical and thermal conductivity [1]

  • Nanoindentation experiments between room temperature and 300 °C were successfully conducted on ultra-fine porous (UFP) Cu

  • Young’s modulus were observed with increasing indentation temperature, which is related to the oxidation of the copper foam

Read more

Summary

Introduction

Nanoporous or ultra-fine porous materials are enormously interesting for a number of future applications due to many excellent properties including: high surface-to-volume ratio, high strength-to-weight ratio, and electrical and thermal conductivity [1]. It has been shown that materials with high interface fractions can accommodate large amounts of helium and radiation-induced defects, as observed in some nuclear applications [2]. In the past these interfaces were found as Kurdjumov–Sachs interfaces in bcc/fcc metals. An individual small scale ligament carries more load than the same volume in a dense bulk material, leading to a weight reduction

Objectives
Results
Discussion
Conclusion
Full Text
Published version (Free)

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call