Investigating the origin of localized plastic deformation in nanoporous gold by in situ electron microscopy and automatic structure quantification

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Date
2019-05-06
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Publisher
Virginia Tech
Abstract

Gold gains many useful properties when it is formed into a nanoporous structure, but it also becomes macroscopically brittle due to flow localization and may therefore be unreliable for many applications. The goal of this work was to establish processing/structure/property relationships of nanoporous gold, discover controllable structure features, and understand the role of structure on flow localization. The nanoporous gold structure, consisting of a 3D network of nanoscale gold ligaments, was quantified with an automatic software developed for this work called AQUAMI, which uses computer vision techniques to make statistically reliable numbers of repeatable and unbiased measurements per image. AQUAMI increased the efficiency and accuracy of characterization in this work, allowed for the conduction of more experiments, and provided better confidence in morphology and size distribution of the complex NPG microstructural features. Nanoporous gold was synthesized while varying numerous processing factors such as dealloying time, annealing time, and mechanical agitation. Through the expanded scope of synthesis experiments and detailed analysis, it was discovered that the curvature of the ligaments and the distribution width of ligament diameters could be controlled through processing. In situ tensile experiments in SEM and TEM revealed that large ligaments arrested crack propagation while curved ligaments increase ductility by straightening in the tensile direction and forming geometrically required defects, which inhibit dislocation activity. Through synthesis and microstructure characterization, two new controllable structure features were discovered experimentally. In situ mechanical testing revealed the role these structures play on the deformation behavior and flow localization of nanoporous gold.

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Keywords
mechanical behavior, computer vision, in situ TEM, nanoporous gold, synthesis
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