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In Situ Nano-Indentation of a Gold Sub-Micrometric Particle Imaged by Multi-Wavelength Bragg Coherent X-ray Diffraction
Authors:Florian Lauraux,Sté  phane Labat,Marie-Ingrid Richard,Steven J. Leake,Tao Zhou,Oleg Kovalenko,Eugen Rabkin,Tobias U. Schü  lli,Olivier Thomas,Thomas W. Cornelius
Affiliation:1.Aix Marseille University, Université de Toulon, CNRS, IM2NP, 13397 Marseille, France;2.ID01/ESRF–The European Synchrotron, 71 Avenue des Martyrs, 38000 Grenoble, France;3.Center for Nanoscale Materials, Argonne National Laboratory, 9700 S Cass Ave, Lemont, IL 60439, USA;4.Department of Materials Science and Engineering, Technion–Israel Institute of Technology, Haifa 3200003, Israel
Abstract:
The microstructure of a sub-micrometric gold crystal during nanoindentation is visualized by in situ multi-wavelength Bragg coherent X-ray diffraction imaging. The gold crystal is indented using a custom-built atomic force microscope. A band of deformation attributed to a shear band oriented along the (221) lattice plane is nucleated at the lower left corner of the crystal and propagates towards the crystal center with increasing applied mechanical load. After complete unloading, an almost strain-free and defect-free crystal is left behind, demonstrating a pseudo-elastic behavior that can only be studied by in situ imaging while it is invisible to ex situ examinations. The recovery is probably associated with reversible dislocations nucleation/annihilation at the side surface of the particle and at the particle-substrate interface, a behavior that has been predicted by atomistic simulations. The full recovery of the particle upon unloading sheds new light on extraordinary mechanical properties of metal nanoparticles obtained by solid-state dewetting.
Keywords:in situ nano-indentation   Bragg coherent X-ray diffraction imaging (BCDI)   plasticity
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