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Published May 2005 | public
Journal Article

Size dependence of mechanical properties of gold at the sub-micron scale

Abstract

The results of both experimental studies and molecular dynamics simulations indicate that crystals exhibit strong size effects at the sub-micron scale. In experimental studies, the size effects are usually explained by strain gradients. By contrast, atomistic simulations suggest that the yield strength depends on the size even without strain gradients and scales with the sample size through a power relationship. Here we address these two different approaches to the size dependence of mechanical properties. Results of uniaxial compression experiments on gold single crystals at the sub-micron scale, without significant stress/strain gradients, are presented. The free-standing single-crystal Au cylinders are created by focused ion beam machining and are subsequently compressed using a nanoindenter fitted with a diamond flat punch. Compressive stresses and strains, as well as pillar stiffnesses, are determined from the test data. The experiments show that the flow stresses of these pillars increase significantly with decreasing pillar diameter, reaching several GPa for the smallest pillars. These high strengths appear to be controlled by dislocation starvation, which is unique to small crystals.

Additional Information

© 2005 Springer-Verlag. Received: 8 December 2004; Accepted: 20 December 2004. Published online: 30 March 2005. The authors would like to thank R. True of Nanoplex, Inc. and Dr. E. Perozziello of Stanford Nanofabrication Facility for their tremendous help with the micro-fabrication techniques. They would also like to acknowledge Kermit Parks of MTS for his indispensable help with the nanoindenter and F. Gang for his help with test works. The valuable discussions and support of Dr. M. Uchic of the AFRL Materials Lab in connection with this work are greatly appreciated. The authors also gratefully acknowledge financial support of this project through grants provided by NSF-NIRT (CMS-0103257) and the Department of Energy (DE-FG03-89ER45387).

Additional details

Created:
August 19, 2023
Modified:
October 24, 2023