The present invention relates to methods for enhancing strength, ductility, and thermal stability of nanostructured materials, namely, by forming amorphous intergranular films (AIFs) in the nanostructured materials.
Nanostructured materials, sometimes also called nanocrystalline or ultra-fine grained materials, are a category of materials with an average crystallite size that is sub-micron (i.e., in the nanometer range). A nanostructured material's key technological advantage is an order of magnitude higher strength when compared to traditional counterparts having larger crystal sizes. This advantage is important in many applications such as defense, aerospace, and auto industries where materials experience high stress levels and must resist permanent deformation. However, the application of nanostructured materials has been very limited due to the instability of the small crystal structure at high temperatures and loss of the typical ductile behavior expected under loading (e.g., drawing of Cu into a wire) [1]. Performance at high temperatures may be important for use in many technological applications but also for materials-forming processes, where temperature is used in conjunction with force to shape a material. Ductility is important for averting engineering structures from failing catastrophically, and allowing a material to be formed into a final shape. Currently, the aforementioned problems hold nanocrystalline metals in the research stage and in applications where the true advantages of these materials are not utilized.
Current solutions to thermal instability include addition of second phase particles and doping of crystal boundaries with elements that segregate to these features. Unfortunately, these solutions often degrade the ductility of nanostructured materials even more [2]. Current strategies for improving the ductility of nanostructured materials include adding special types of crystal boundaries called twins [3] or adding a spatial gradient of grain size to resist strain localization [4]. The addition of twins is limited to certain pure, single element materials, while gradient nanostructures have no added thermal stability. From the discussion above, a different approach is necessary to manipulate the interfacial regions of nanocrystalline materials to access both types of novel properties (thermal stability and mechanical) and address the problems such as unstable grain structure and lack of ductility. The current invention takes advantage of dopant segregation to introduce a new type of crystal boundary structure, an amorphous intergranular film (AIF), in nanostructured materials that has the potential to address many of the current challenges in the field.
Any feature or combination of features described herein are included within the scope of the present invention provided that the features included in any such combination are not mutually inconsistent as will be apparent from the context, this specification, and the knowledge of one of ordinary skill in the art. Additional advantages and aspects of the present invention are apparent in the following detailed description and claims.
The present invention discloses a new class of nanomaterials or nanostructured materials with tunable grain boundary structure and methods of generating said materials. As will be described herein, a tunable grain boundary structure is formed by a plurality of amorphous intergranular films (AIFs) within the nanostructured material.
In some aspects, the present invention discloses a method for increasing thermal stability and ductility of a nanostructured material, said nanostructured material comprising a base material in a form of a plurality of crystallites each having a boundary (“crystallite boundary”) defining a crystalline interior. The method includes selecting a dopant element compatible with the base material such that the dopant element and the base material may be immiscible, the dopant element may include a negative heat of mixing, an atomic size difference between the dopant element and the base material may be sufficiently large to encourage disorder at the crystallite boundaries of the nanostructured material, and metallic bonding may be retained at the crystallite boundary. In other aspects, the method may include mixing the dopant element and the base material to produce a supersaturated solid material alloy, wherein the dopant element is dispersed throughout the crystallite boundaries and crystalline interiors, and applying a first heat treatment to the supersaturated solid material alloy to provide thermal energy sufficient to induce diffusion of the dopant element to the crystallite boundaries, wherein the crystalline interiors may be substantially depleted of the dopant element after application of the first heat treatment.
Additionally or alternatively, the method may include applying a second heat treatment to create an amorphous liquid-like structure at the crystallite boundaries, wherein the amorphous liquid-like structure comprises the dopant element and the base material (wherein the crystalline interiors remains solid during the second heat treatment and quenching the supersaturated solid material alloy to freeze the amorphous liquid-like structure, thus forming amorphous intergranular films (AIFs) at the crystallite boundaries. Segregation of the dopant element via the diffusion of the dopant element to the crystallite boundaries may lower a crystal boundary energy, thereby making the nanostructured material stable at high temperatures, and the formation of the AIFs at the crystallite boundaries of the nanostructured material may increase both strength and ductility of the nanostructured material as compared to materials lacking AIFs.
In some embodiments, the mixing may include agitating and co-deforming powders of the base material and the dopant element to mechanically mix the base material and the dopant element. The agitating and co-deforming may be performed using a ball-milling instrument. Applying the first heat treatment may include annealing the supersaturated solid material alloy at a first temperature for a first threshold time and wherein applying the second heat treatment may include annealing the supersaturated solid material alloy at a second temperature for a second threshold time. The second temperature may be greater than or equal to the first temperature. Additionally or alternatively, the method may further include selecting the first temperature, the second temperature, the first threshold time, and the second threshold time based on one or more of the base material, the dopant element, and a phase diagram of the supersaturated solid material alloy. The supersaturated solid material alloy may include two or more dopant elements. The supersaturated solid material alloy may include two or more base materials. The dopant element may include Zr, Fe, Co, Ni, Rh, Pd, Pt, or other non-transition or transition metals. The base material may include Cu, Fe, steel, Ni, Ti, other transition metals, Al, Mg, or other non-transition metals.
According to some embodiments, a method of forming an amorphous intergranular film (“AIF”) surrounding crystallite structures of a base material of a nanostructured material is provided. The crystallite structure comprises a crystalline interior having a grain boundary. The method includes mixing a dopant element to the base material to form a solid material alloy. Herein, the dopant element may be selected based on an ability of the dopant element to segregate to the grain boundary of the base material, the dopant element and the base material being immiscible; and an atomic size difference between the dopant element and the base material being sufficiently large to encourage disorder at the crystallite boundaries of the nanostructured material.
The method may further include applying a heat treatment to the solid material alloy to preferentially segregate the dopant element to the grain boundary and to selectively melt an interfacial mixture at the grain boundary to form a liquid-like structure at the grain boundary. Additionally or alternatively, the method may include quenching the solid material alloy to freeze the liquid-like structure of the interfacial mixture at the grain boundary, while maintaining the crystalline interior solid. As such, the AIF formed at the grain boundary of the base material may enhance strength, ductility, and thermal stability of the nanostructured material. Applying the heat treatment may include annealing the solid material alloy at a threshold temperature for a threshold time to diffuse the dopant element to the grain boundary of the base material and melt the dopant element and the base material in the interfacial mixture to form the AIF at the grain boundary. The threshold temperature may be adjusted based on a melting temperature of each of the base material and the dopant element. The base material may include copper (“Cu”), and the dopant element may include comprises zirconium (“Zr”) and the solid material alloy may be a Cu-3 atomic percent Zr alloy.
In yet other aspects, a nanocrystalline structure comprising a copper-zirconium (“Cu—Zr”) alloy of Cu with about 3 atomic % Zr is provided. The nanocrystalline structure may be in a form of a crystalline interior comprised primarily of Cu surrounded by grain boundaries comprising amorphous intergranular films (“AIFs”) of the Cu—Zr alloy. Herein, Zr may have a negative heat of mixing and may be immiscible with Cu. Zr may maintain metallic bonding at the grain boundaries and an atomic size difference of Zr and Cu may encourage disorder at the grain boundaries of the nanocrystalline structure. The AIF at the grain boundaries may enhance strength, ductility, and thermal stability of the nanocrystalline structure. The AIFs may be formed by annealing the Cu—Zr alloy at a first temperature, the annealing causing Zr to diffuse to the grain boundary and further includes melting Cu and Zr at the grain boundary to form a liquid-like structure. Additionally or alternatively, forming the AIFs may include rapidly quenching from the first temperature to a second temperature to freeze the liquid-like structure at the grain boundary. The first temperature may be selected based on one or more of a melting temperature of pure Cu, a solidus temperature of the Cu—Zr alloy, and a Cu—Zr phase diagram. The first temperature may be about 950° C. and the second temperature may be about room temperature.
One of the unique and inventive technical features of the present invention is the selection of dopant element that is compatible with the base material such that the dopant element and the base material are immiscible, the dopant element may include a negative heat of mixing, an atomic size difference between the dopant element and the base material may be sufficiently large to encourage disorder at the crystallite boundaries of the nanostructured material, and metallic bonding may be retained at the crystallite boundary formation of AIFs. Without wishing to limit the invention to any theory or mechanism, it is believed that the technical feature of the present invention advantageously allows for the formation of AIFs in the nanostructured materials that results in increased ductility and toughness of the nanostructured metals without sacrificing any strength, thus, breaking the paradigm of a direct strength-ductility trade-off that has dominated prior observations. None of the presently known prior references or work has the unique inventive technical feature of the present invention.
In fact, the current scientific thinking is that the amorphous intergranular films would be impossible in metallic alloys. For example, metals have metallic bonding considered to be simpler than ceramics, which have a more complex chemistry with covalent and ionic bonding. This led to some disbelief that it would be possible to make the type of nanomaterials of the present invention. Further still, grain boundary pre-melting, which is used in the present invention, was not thought to be possible. Unexpectedly and surprisingly, the present invention not only achieved the formation of stable AIFs, but also used grain boundary pre-melting to effectively form the AIFs in the nanostructured materials.
Moreover, the enhanced ductility of the AIFs in the nanostructured material of the present invention was in itself another unexpected feature. Traditionally, amorphous materials are very brittle, (e.g., window glass). In fact, amorphous metals or metallic glasses are extremely brittle on their own. Based on this traditional thinking, it was believed that adding AIFs would make the nanostructured material worse. However, contrary to this current teaching, the present invention was successfully able to achieve nanostructured materials with enhanced strength and ductility by selective formation of AIFs at grain boundaries.
Some of the challenges that were successfully overcome in designing the experiments that led to the formation of the AIFs include finding the correct chemistries that allow for grain boundary segregation and the reduction of the energy penalty for an amorphous phase. While performing the experiments, a unique and inventive quench process was developed, which included quenching in the phases that are only stable at high temperatures, relatively close to the melting point.
Further advantages of the present invention include flexibility and scalability. For example, the method for generating the nanomaterials creates a wide variety of chemistries while also being scalable so that the materials may be used to produce bulk quantities of material. The criteria for materials selection implemented in the present invention, such as segregation and lowering of the energy penalty of the AIF, may be applied to other systems. For instance, the materials used to produce the AIFs in nanostructured materials are from powder metallurgy techniques. As such, powder metallurgy can be used to make large or bulk parts.
Any feature or combination of features described herein are included within the scope of the present invention provided that the features included in any such combination are not mutually inconsistent as will be apparent from the context, this specification, and the knowledge of one of ordinary skill in the art. Additional advantages and aspects of the present invention are apparent in the following detailed description and claims.
The features and advantages of the present invention will become apparent from a consideration of the following detailed description presented in connection with the accompanying drawings in which:
Following is a list of elements corresponding to a particular element referred to herein:
100 method
102 mix dopant element with base material
104 heat treatment
106 first heat treatment
108 second heat treatment
110 quench
200 schematic representation
202 crystalline interior
204 grain boundary
206 base material
208 dopant element
210 amorphous intergranular film (AIF)
214 nanostructured material
216 solid material alloy
218 interfacial mixture
302 TEM image
304 TEM image
306 EDS profile
402 TEM image
404 TEM image
406 EDS profile
502 image
602 image
604 area
606 interface
608 area
610 Fast Fourier Transform (FFT) pattern
612 FFT pattern
614 FFT pattern
802 plot
804 plot
Referring now to
In some example embodiments, the dopant element may be selected such that a solubility of the dopant material is lower compared to the base material, so that the solid material formed when the dopant element is mixed with the base material, is supersaturated. As an example, when Zr is mixed with Cu, since Zr has negligible solubility (about 0.12 atomic %) in the Cu lattice, the Cu—Zr structure may be referred to as a supersaturated solid solution. Supersaturated solution implies that the lattice of the nanostructured material has more of the dopants than it can handle energetically. As Without wishing to limit the invention to a particular mechanism, the supersaturation of the solution may provide a driving force for segregation of the dopant elements to the grain boundaries.
At 102 of method 100, the dopant element (208) and the base material (206) may be mechanically mixed to generate a solid material alloy (216). The solid material alloy may be interchangeably referred to as the supersaturated solid material. Alternate embodiments feature two or more dopant elements and/or two or more base materials comprising the supersaturated solid.
Herein, the mixing may include agitating and co-deforming powders of the base material (206) and the dopant element (208) to mechanically mix the base material and the dopant material. In a non-limiting embodiment, the agitating and co-deforming to produce the solid material alloy (216) may be produced by using a ball milling instrument. As such, mechanical alloying with a high-energy ball mill produces powders with particle sizes of micrometer-scale diameter, with each particle containing many individual nanometer-scale grains. Other non-limiting example of methods of producing the solid material alloy include severe plastic deformation techniques such as planetary milling, equal channel angular pressing (ECAP), equal channel angular extrusion (ECAE), and high pressure torsion (HPT). Additional techniques to produce the solid material include deposition techniques, such as sputter deposition, evaporation, or electrodeposition.
At 104, method 100 may include applying a heat treatment to the supersaturated solid material alloy (216) to provide thermal energy sufficient to induce diffusion of the dopant material (208) to the grain boundaries (204) and to selectively melt an interfacial mixture (218) at the grain boundary (204). As such, the interfacial mixture (218) may include base material (206) already existing at the grain boundary (204) mixed with the dopant material (208) that has diffused to the grain boundary (204), because of the heat treatment (104). In some example embodiments, the heat treatment may be performed as two successive heat treatments (106 and 108), wherein the first heat treatment (106) may include annealing the solid material alloy (216) to initiate the diffusion or segregation of the dopant element (208) to the grain boundary (204), followed by a second heat treatment (108) to create an amorphous phase at the grain boundary (204). Herein, the dopant element (208) may be substantially depleted at each crystalline interior (202) after application of the first heat treatment (106). In some examples, the crystalline interior may be about at least 90% depleted of the dopant element (208). In some more examples, the crystalline interior may be about at least 95% depleted of the dopant element (208).
In addition, the grain boundaries (204) may be saturated or enriched with the dopant material (208), as shown in
When the second heat treatment (108) is applied to the solid material, the amorphous phase created may be a liquid-like structure comprising the dopant element (208) and the base material (206). The second heat treatment (108) may selectively create the liquid-like structure in the grain boundary (204) while maintaining a crystalline interior (202) solid. Without wishing to limit the invention to a particular theory or mechanism, because the grain boundary is doped, it has a different composition than the grain interior and melts at a lower temperature. Therefore, a temperature above the critical value for grain boundary pre-melting but below the bulk melting temperature is required. Thus, the region at the grain boundary, which is chemically comprised of both the base material and the dopant element, is the only thing that melts during the heat treatment.
As an example, the first heat treatment (106) may include annealing the solid material alloy (216) at a first temperature for a first threshold time, and the second heat treatment (108) may include further annealing the solid material alloy (216) at a second temperature for a second threshold time. One of ordinary skill in the art would understand and appreciate that said temperatures and times can depend on several factors. For example, the first temperature and the first threshold time may be selected based on one or more of the base material, the dopant element, grain size, and a phase diagram of the solid material alloy. In one example embodiment, the second temperature may be higher than the first temperature. In examples where a single heat treatment (104) is performed, the first temperature may be the same as the second temperature. In an example embodiment, the first and the second temperature may be adjusted based on a melting temperature of each of the base material (206) and the dopant element (208), a solidus temperature of the solid material alloy, and a phase diagram of the solid material alloy. In one example embodiment, the first and the second threshold temperature may be set to be higher than a temperature that induces grain boundary pre-melting but is below a bulk melting temperature. In one non-limiting example, for a Cu—Zr alloy, the first threshold temperature may be set as 950° C. and the second threshold temperature may be set as 500° C., and the first and second threshold time may be 1 hour.
Next, at 110, method 100 includes quenching the solid material alloy (216) to freeze the liquid-like structure to form a plurality of amorphous intergranular films (AIFs) (210) at the grain boundaries (204). After quenching, the plurality of AIFs (210) are observed at the grain boundaries (204). In one example embodiment, quenching may include quickly decreasing the temperature from the second temperature to a third, lower temperature, in a short time. In one non-limiting example, the third temperature may be about room or ambient temperature (about 20° C.). For example, the solid material may be quenched by placing the solid material into a large water bath at room temperature, in less than a second, to quickly freeze the structures in the interfacial mixture. AIFs are structurally disordered (lacking the ordered pattern of a crystal) films that are up to a few nanometers thick. Nanostructured materials containing these films exhibit increased ductility, strength, and thermal stability simultaneously. As an example, the AIF formation in a copper-zirconium (Cu—Zr) alloy is shown below.
The following is a non-limiting example of the present invention. It is to be understood that the examples described herein are not intended to limit the invention in any way. Equivalents or substitutes are within the scope of the invention.
Described in the present invention are amorphous intergranular films formed within nanostructured materials. Nanostructured materials, (materials with average grain size of less than 1 micron), have exceptional properties (e.g. high strength) and are the focus of recent research of engineering applications. The addition of amorphous intergranular films dramatically changes physical and mechanical properties of nanostructured materials. The present method of creating amorphous intergranular films is based on mixing two or more elements and inducing dopant elements to segregate to the crystal boundaries of the base element. To show the formation AIFs in a nanostructured material, pure copper (“Cu”) powder was mixed with 3% pure zirconium (“Zr”) powder using a ball milling instrument, which agitates and co-deforms the powders so that they mechanically mix. It may be appreciated that this material design idea is not specific to ball milling or mechanical alloying, but rather can be used for any processing method. Cu and Zr were chosen for this example since, based on the standard phase diagram of the two elements, segregation is expected due to limited miscibility of Zr in the base Cu. However, by using a high energy ball milling technique, a super saturated solid solution of these elements is possible. The Cu—Zr alloys thus produced were found to be stable to 950 degrees C., which is 98% of the melting temperature. This is among the highest reported stability for these materials.
In one example embodiment, the base material (206) in
After the solid solution alloy is made, a heat treatment step gives the Zr atoms thermal energy to segregate to the crystal boundaries of the nanostructured Cu, which is schematically shown in
The segregation of the dopant element (Zr) from the base material (nanostructured Cu) lowers the crystal boundary energy of the microstructure, making the material more resistant to high temperature. The grain structure of the Cu—Zr alloy after the heat treatment is shown in
Next, mechanical properties of the Cu—Zr alloy with AIFs were compared with a pure nanostructured Cu, and a nanostructured Cu—Zr of the same composition (but without AIFs, i.e., having ordered interfaces). Micron-size pillars were made from each material type using a focused ion beam microscope. These pillars were then tested in compression and bending modes to measure compressive strength and strain-to-failure values, respectively.
To explain this phenomenon, plastic deformation in nanocrystalline metals is studied. Without wishing to limit the invention to a particular theory or mechanism, traditional dislocation mechanisms are suppressed at the grain sizes observed in this study. Dislocations nucleate at the grain boundaries and get absorbed at the grain boundaries. Since a regular grain boundary cannot absorb many dislocations, a crack nucleates along the crystal boundary path and eventually causes catastrophic failure in a regular nanostructured metal [6]. However, in a nanostructured material with amorphous intergranular films, the crystal boundary is disordered and has a finite thickness to it. Therefore, it can absorb more dislocation and delays the formation of a crack, which corresponds to the added ductility.
Various modifications of the invention, in addition to those described herein, will be apparent to those skilled in the art from the foregoing description. Such modifications are also intended to fall within the scope of the appended claims. Each reference cited in the present application is incorporated herein by reference in its entirety.
Although there has been shown and described the preferred embodiment of the present invention, it will be readily apparent to those skilled in the art that modifications may be made thereto which do not exceed the scope of the appended claims. Therefore, the scope of the invention is only to be limited by the following claims. Reference numbers recited in the below claims are solely for ease of examination of this patent application, and are exemplary, and are not intended in any way to limit the scope of the claims to the particular features having the corresponding reference numbers in the drawings. In some embodiments, the figures presented in this patent application are drawn to scale, including the angles, ratios of dimensions, etc. In some embodiments, the figures are representative only and the claims are not limited by the dimensions of the figures. In some embodiments, descriptions of the inventions described herein using the phrase “comprising” includes embodiments that could be described as “consisting of”, and as such the written description requirement for claiming one or more embodiments of the present invention using the phrase “consisting of” is met.
[1] J. A. Sharon et al., J. Mat. Research. 28, 12 (2013).
[2] K. Lu et al., Scrip. Metal. Mater. 24, (1990).
[3] L. Lu et al., Science 304, 5669 (2004).
[4] I. S. Choi et al., J. Mech. Phys. Sol. 56, 1 (2008).
[5] T. Chookajorn et al., Science, 24, 337 (2012).
[6] Pan, Z. & Rupert, T. J. Damage nucleation from repeated dislocation absorption at a grain boundary. Comput. Mater. Sci. 93, 206 (2014).
This application claims priority to U.S. Provisional Patent Application No. 62/459,987, filed Feb. 16, 2017, the specification(s) of which is/are incorporated herein in their entirety by reference.
This invention was made with government support under Grant No. W911NF-12-1-0511 awarded by the U.S. Army Research Office. The government has certain rights in the invention.
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K. Lu et al., Microhardness and fracture properties of nanocrystalline NiP alloy. Scripta Metallurgica et Materialia, vol. 24, Issue 12, Dec. 1990, pp. 2319-2323. |
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20180230573 A1 | Aug 2018 | US |
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62459987 | Feb 2017 | US |