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Elastic strain engineering for unprecedented materials properties

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  12 February 2014

Ju Li
Affiliation:
Massachusetts Institute of Technology, USA; liju@mit.edu
Zhiwei Shan
Affiliation:
Xi’an Jiaotong University, China; zwshan@mail.xjtu.edu.cn
Evan Ma
Affiliation:
Johns Hopkins University, USA; ema@jhu.edu

Abstract

“Smaller is stronger.” Nanostructured materials such as thin films, nanowires, nanoparticles, bulk nanocomposites, and atomic sheets can withstand non-hydrostatic (e.g., tensile or shear) stresses up to a significant fraction of their ideal strength without inelastic relaxation by plasticity or fracture. Large elastic strains, up to ∼10%, can be generated by epitaxy or by external loading on small-volume or bulk-scale nanomaterials and can be spatially homogeneous or inhomogeneous. This leads to new possibilities for tuning the physical and chemical properties of a material, such as electronic, optical, magnetic, phononic, and catalytic properties, by varying the six-dimensional elastic strain as continuous variables. By controlling the elastic strain field statically or dynamically, a much larger parameter space opens up for optimizing the functional properties of materials, which gives new meaning to Richard Feynman’s 1959 statement, “there’s plenty of room at the bottom.”

Information

Type
Introduction
Copyright
Copyright © Materials Research Society 2014 
Figure 0

Figure 1. Elastic strain engineering imparts an additional layer of meaning to Richard Feynman’s 1959 statement, “there’s plenty of room at the bottom.” For simplicity, we use only two principal stress/strain axes to illustrate the six-dimensional strain space (stress σ, and elastic strain εe). The dashed line is the ideal strength/strain surface εideal. High-pressure physics mostly explores the narrow region along the negative diagonal line, and mechanical properties explorations before 1986 were mostly limited to the small deviatoric-stress and tensile-stress region. Since the mid-1990s, there has been an explosion of activities making and placing nanomaterials in the ultra-strength regime.

Figure 1

Figure 2. Four ingredients of elastic strain engineering must converge for explosive growth of this field.

Figure 2

Figure 3. Elastic strain engineering of kilogram-scale Nb nanowires (a–b) is made possible by coupling them to a NiTi shape-memory matrix (b) “loader.” Completely reversible change in Nb lattice spacing, up to one million loading-unloading cycles, was demonstrated by in situ synchrotron x-ray diffraction (c). Figure is reprinted with permission from Reference 35. © 2013 AAAS.