Authors
X Zhang, A Misra, H Wang, M Nastasi, JD Embury, TE Mitchell, RG Hoagland, JP Hirth
Publication date
2004/2/16
Journal
Applied physics letters
Volume
84
Issue
7
Pages
1096-1098
Publisher
American Institute of Physics
Description
Magnetron-sputter-deposited austenitic 330 stainless steel 330 SS films, several microns thick, were found to have a hardness 6.5 GPa, about an order of magnitude higher than bulk 330 SS. High-resolution transmission electron microscopy revealed that sputtered 330 SS coatings are heavily twinned on 111 with nanometer scale twin spacing. Molecular dynamics simulations show that, in the nanometer regime where plasticity is controlled by the motion of single rather than pile-ups of dislocations, twin boundaries are very strong obstacles to slip. These observations provide a new perspective to producing ultrahigh strength monolithic metals by utilizing growth twins with nanometer-scale spacing.© 2004 American Institute of Physics.
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Scholar articles
X Zhang, A Misra, H Wang, M Nastasi, JD Embury… - Applied physics letters, 2004