Abstract

The mechanical deformation properties of (110) Co/Cu multilayered nanowires were studied by Molecular Dynamics under uniaxial tensile and compressive stresses. The potential of the immiscible CoCu system was modeled by a second-moment tight-binding approximation. Stress-strain curves at different conditions were obtained and the elastic modulus and yield stress were analyzed. Both magnitudes are approximately independent of the strain rate, except at high values. They decrease linearly with increasing temperature. Below a volume-to-surface-area ratio, their values drastically increase and diverge from the bulk values. If the thickness of the Cu sublayers increases, the Young's modulus and yield stress decrease, although in a different way. The elastic modulus decreases linearly and the yield stress falls steeply whenever Cu is present in the nanowire, since the lattice distortion takes place firstly and fundamentally in Cu sublayers. The change in the axial stress at the interface is little significant on average and rather localized. Unlike, the transverse stress has a non-uniform distribution along the Cu sublayer, especially at the yield point. The Young's modulus and yield stress are larger in tension than in compression. Under tensile stress, nanowires slip via partial dislocation nucleation and propagation. Unlike, compressive deformation of nanowires takes place via both partial and full dislocations.

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