Abstract

Nanostructured metals with conventional grain boundaries or interfaces exhibit high strength yet usually poor ductility. Here we report an interface engineering strategy that breaks the strength-ductility dilemma via externally incorporating graphene oxide at lamella boundaries of aluminum (Al) nanolaminates. By forming the binary intergranular films where graphene oxide was sandwiched between two amorphous alumina layers, the Al-based composite nanolaminates achieved ultrahigh compressive strength (over 1 GPa) while retaining excellent plastic deformability. Complementing experimental results with molecular dynamics simulation efforts, the ultrahigh strength was interpreted by the strong blocking effect of the binary intergranular films on dislocation nucleation and propagation, and the excellent plasticity was found to originate from the stress/strain-induced crystalline-to-amorphous transition of graphene oxide and the synergistic deformation between Al nanolamellas and the binary intergranular films.

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