Design, Fabrication, and Characterization of Metals Reinforced with Two-Dimensional (2D) Materials
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The development of metals that can overcome the strength-ductility-weight trade-off has been an ongoing challenge in engineering for many decades. A promising option for making such materials are Metal matrix composites (MMCs). MMCs contain dispersions of reinforcement in the form of fibers, particles, or platelets that significantly improve their thermal, electrical, or mechanical performance. This dissertation focuses on reinforcement with two-dimensional (2D) materials due to their unprecedented mechanical properties. For instance, compared to steel, the most well-studied 2D material, graphene, is nearly forty times stronger (130 GPa) and five times stiffer (1 TPa). Examples of reinforcement by graphene have achieved increases in strength of 60% due to load transfer at the metal/graphene interface and dislocation blocking by the graphene. However, the superior mechanical properties of graphene are not fully transferred to the matrix in conventional MMCs, a phenomenon known as the "valley of death." In an effort to develop key insight into how the relationships between composite design, processing, structure, properties, and mechanics can be used to more effectively transfer the intrinsic mechanical properties of reinforcements to bulk composite materials, nanolayered composite systems made of Ni, Cu, and NiTi reinforced with graphene or 2D hexagonal boron nitride h-BN is studied using experimental techniques and molecular dynamics (MD) simulations.