Abstract
The fracture toughness and fatigue crack growth resistance of nanocrystalline materials are significantly affected by the thickness of the specimen. In this work we relate the mechanical properties of nanocrystalline platinum films to their texture and grain morphology. Tensile, creep and fatigue testing of annealed, ∼1μm films resulted in mechanical properties similar to the as-received films (yield strength of ∼1.2GPa, fracture toughness ∼17.8MPa√m, and a fatigue crack growth power law exponent of ∼4.2). However, the breakdown of the initially columnar grain morphology had a marked effect on the transition point from an intergranular to transgranular fatigue cracking mode. Finite element modeling suggests that cyclic (fatigue) grain coarsening and the transition from inter- to transgranular cracking modes are a result of the relative importance of dislocation slip accommodation on in-plane and through-thickness oriented slip directions.
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