Abstract

Nanocrystalline metallic materials exhibit different mechanical properties compared with coarse-grained counterparts. In essence, the high density of grain boundaries contributes to significant portion of plasticity, which is more pronounced in thin films. Due to intrinsic geometric limitation, the responses of nanocrystalline films under shear-dominant loading are seldom understood. Here, we take Ag film as an example, with a larger indentation depth than film thickness, the deformation beneath the pyramidal surfaces of the indenter is considered to be dominated by in-plane shear stress with gradient distribution. The shear-dominant loading leads to directional grain elongation within indentation region, accompanied with frequent formation of nanotwins across the grain boundaries. These findings enrich our understanding of stress induced grain growth under nanoindentation, and provide a novel way to study shear-dominated plastic deformation in metallic nanocrystalline films.

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