TY - JOUR
T1 - Dual-Phase Super-Strong and Elastic Ceramic
AU - Li, Fengshi
AU - Zhao, Hewei
AU - Yue, Yonghai
AU - Yang, Zhao
AU - Zhang, Youwei
AU - Guo, Lin
N1 - Publisher Copyright:
© 2019 American Chemical Society.
PY - 2019/4/23
Y1 - 2019/4/23
N2 - Ceramic materials exhibit very high stiffness and extraordinary strength, but they typically suffer from brittleness. Amorphization and size confinement are commonly used to reinforce materials. However, the inverse Hall-Petch effect and the shear-band softening effect usually limit further improvement of their performance under a critical size. With an optimum structure design, we demonstrate that dual-phase zirconia nanowires (DP-ZrO 2 NWs) with nanocrystals embedded in an amorphous matrix as a strengthening phase can overcome these problems simultaneously. As a result of this structure, in situ tensile tests demonstrate that the mechanical properties have been enormously improved in a way that does not follow both the inverse Hall-Petch effect and the shear band softening effect. The elastic strain approaches 7%, and the ultimate strength is 3.52 GPa, accompanied by a high toughness of 151 MJ m -3 , making the DP-ZrO 2 NW composite the strongest and toughest ZrO 2 ever achieved. The findings provide a way to improve the mechanical properties of ceramics in a controllable manner, which may serve as a pervasive approach to be broadly applied to a variety of materials.
AB - Ceramic materials exhibit very high stiffness and extraordinary strength, but they typically suffer from brittleness. Amorphization and size confinement are commonly used to reinforce materials. However, the inverse Hall-Petch effect and the shear-band softening effect usually limit further improvement of their performance under a critical size. With an optimum structure design, we demonstrate that dual-phase zirconia nanowires (DP-ZrO 2 NWs) with nanocrystals embedded in an amorphous matrix as a strengthening phase can overcome these problems simultaneously. As a result of this structure, in situ tensile tests demonstrate that the mechanical properties have been enormously improved in a way that does not follow both the inverse Hall-Petch effect and the shear band softening effect. The elastic strain approaches 7%, and the ultimate strength is 3.52 GPa, accompanied by a high toughness of 151 MJ m -3 , making the DP-ZrO 2 NW composite the strongest and toughest ZrO 2 ever achieved. The findings provide a way to improve the mechanical properties of ceramics in a controllable manner, which may serve as a pervasive approach to be broadly applied to a variety of materials.
KW - dual-phase
KW - in situ tensile tests
KW - inverse Hall-Petch effect
KW - shear band softening effect
KW - zirconia nanowires
UR - https://www.scopus.com/pages/publications/85061248336
U2 - 10.1021/acsnano.8b09195
DO - 10.1021/acsnano.8b09195
M3 - 文章
C2 - 30694049
AN - SCOPUS:85061248336
SN - 1936-0851
VL - 13
SP - 4191
EP - 4198
JO - ACS Nano
JF - ACS Nano
IS - 4
ER -