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Dynamic Martensitic Phase Transformation in Single-Crystal Silver Microcubes

30 Pages Posted: 28 May 2019 Publication Status: Accepted

See all articles by Ramathasan Thevamaran

Ramathasan Thevamaran

University of Wisconsin - Madison - Department of Engineering Physics

Claire Griesbach

University of Wisconsin - Madison - Department of Engineering Physics

Sadegh Yazdi

University of Colorado at Boulder - Institue of Renewable and Sustainable Energy

Mauricio Ponga

University of British Columbia (UBC) - Department of Mechanical Engineering

Hossein Alimadadi

Technical University of Denmark - DTU Danchip/Cen

Olawale Lawal

Rice University - Department of Materials Science and NanoEngineering

Seog-Jin Jeon

Kumoh National Institute of Technology (KIT) - Department of Polymer Science and Engineering

Edwin L. Thomas

Rice University - Department of Materials Science and NanoEngineering

Abstract

The ability to transform the crystal structure of metals in the solid state enables tailoring their physical, mechanical, electrical, thermal, and optical properties in unprecedented ways. We demonstrate a martensitic phase transformation from a face-centered-cubic (fcc) structure to a hexagonal-close-packed (hcp) structure that occurs in nanosecond timescale in initially near-defect-free single-crystal silver (Ag) microcubes impacted at supersonic velocities. Impact-induced high pressure and high strain rates in Ag microcubes cause impact orientation dependent extreme micro- and nano-structural transformations. When a microcube is impacted along the [100] crystal symmetry direction, the initial fcc structure transforms into an hcp crystal structure, while impact along the [110] direction does not produce phase transformations, suggesting the predominant role played by the stacking faults generated in the [100] impact. Molecular dynamics simulations at comparable high strain rates reveal the emergence of such stacking faults that coalesce, forming large hcp domains. The formation of hcp phase through the martensitic transformation of fcc Ag shows new potential to dramatically improve material properties of low-stacking-fault energy materials.

Keywords: phase transformation, gradient nano grained metals, silver, fcc, hcp

Suggested Citation

Thevamaran, Ramathasan and Griesbach, Claire and Yazdi, Sadegh and Ponga, Mauricio and Alimadadi, Hossein and Lawal, Olawale and Jeon, Seog-Jin and Thomas, Edwin L., Dynamic Martensitic Phase Transformation in Single-Crystal Silver Microcubes (May 26, 2019). Available at SSRN: https://ssrn.com/abstract=3394563 or http://dx.doi.org/10.2139/ssrn.3394563

Ramathasan Thevamaran (Contact Author)

University of Wisconsin - Madison - Department of Engineering Physics ( email )

1415 Engineering Drive
Madison, WI 53706
United States

Claire Griesbach

University of Wisconsin - Madison - Department of Engineering Physics

1415 Engineering Drive
Madison, WI 53706
United States

Sadegh Yazdi

University of Colorado at Boulder - Institue of Renewable and Sustainable Energy

United States

Mauricio Ponga

University of British Columbia (UBC) - Department of Mechanical Engineering

Canada

Hossein Alimadadi

Technical University of Denmark - DTU Danchip/Cen

Denmark

Olawale Lawal

Rice University - Department of Materials Science and NanoEngineering

United States

Seog-Jin Jeon

Kumoh National Institute of Technology (KIT) - Department of Polymer Science and Engineering

Korea, Republic of (South Korea)

Edwin L. Thomas

Rice University - Department of Materials Science and NanoEngineering ( email )

United States

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