On the importance of sample compliance in uniaxial microtesting D. Kiener,
Transcription
On the importance of sample compliance in uniaxial microtesting D. Kiener,
Available online at www.sciencedirect.com Scripta Materialia 60 (2009) 148–151 www.elsevier.com/locate/scriptamat On the importance of sample compliance in uniaxial microtesting D. Kiener,a,b W. Grosingerb and G. Dehmb,c,* a b Materials Center Leoben, Forschungs GmbH, A-8700 Leoben, Austria Erich Schmid Institute of Materials Science, Austrian Academy of Sciences, A-8700 Leoben, Austria c Department of Materials Physics, Montanuniversita¨t Leoben, A-8700 Leoben, Austria Received 1 July 2008; revised 4 September 2008; accepted 19 September 2008 Available online 8 October 2008 Recent investigations have reported significantly higher flow stresses for microcompression compared to microtensile testing. To clarify this point a load reversal test was performed on a microtensile specimen and equal flow stresses in tension and compression were observed. In contrast, if the lateral sample compliance constrains the deformation, microcompression testing overestimates the flow stresses. Additional contributions to the measured flow stresses stem from the aspect ratio of the sample and dislocation pile-ups. Ó 2008 Acta Materialia Inc. Published by Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved. Keywords: Copper; Materials with reduced dimensions; Size effects; Plastic deformation It is well established that the strength of small single-crystal specimens is influenced by the sample dimension [1–8]. This has been extensively studied by a number of groups using a microcompression technique originally developed by Uchic and Dimiduk [9], where a focussed ion beam (FIB) machined sample is compressed by a flat diamond tip attached to a nanoindenter, for a variety of metals (Ni, Au, Cu, Mo, NiTi, Al, etc.) [1–6,8]. Despite the different experimental parameters for the various experiments, a general conclusion that smaller samples sustain higher stress levels can be drawn. Nonetheless, the origin of the observed strengthening is still under debate. The two most frequently considered models focus on source truncation and exhaustion hardening [10–12] and dislocation starvation [13]. Recently, a new microtensile testing technique was reported by Kiener et al. [14]. Comparing the strength of FIB machined single-crystal Cu specimens loaded in compression [5,15,16] and tension [14] using identical fabrication parameters and the same in situ testing set-up at moderate strain rates of the order of 3 103 s1 reveals different stress levels between the two loading modes with significantly lower stresses for the tensile experiments, as shown in Figure 1 at 10% strain. Power-law fits lead to exponents of 0.38 and 0.47 for * Corresponding author. Address: Erich Schmid Institute of Materials Science, Austrian Academy of Sciences, A-8700 Leoben, Austria. Tel.: +43 3842 804 112; fax: +43 3842 804 116; e-mail: gerhard. [email protected] microcompression and microtensile testing, respectively. The exponent for microtensile tests with an aspect ratio of 5:1 is dominated by the two data points of the smallest samples (0.5 lm). If the tests presented in Figure 2 with aspect ratios (sample length/side length) P2:1 were included into the fit, the exponent reduces to 0.42. Since the values for power exponents reported in the literature vary by ±0.1, this difference is not considered further. Much more important, and thus subject to further investigation, is that the measured stress levels differ by more than a factor of 3. A similar observation was reported by Gruber et al. [17] who compared tensile testing of single-crystal Au films on a compliant polyimide substrate to compression testing of Au pillars [1,4]. This discrepancy between tension and compression is unexpected. Furthermore, theoretical models such as exhaustion hardening or starvation are not capable of explaining different stress levels for microtension and microcompression testing. An asymmetry between tension and compression is known from body-centred cubic (bcc) bulk materials as a consequence of the three-fold dislocation core splitting of screw dislocations. For face-centred cubic (fcc) bulk materials, there is an asymmetry between tension and compression in cyclic single-crystal deformation, with the stresses in compression higher than those in tension. The main reason for this behaviour is inhomogeneous deformation within persistent slip bands with higher confinement of the soft persistent slip bands by the harder matrix in compression. Moreover, the observed differences are only of the order of several per 1359-6462/$ - see front matter Ó 2008 Acta Materialia Inc. Published by Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved. doi:10.1016/j.scriptamat.2008.09.024 D. Kiener et al. / Scripta Materialia 60 (2009) 148–151 Figure 1. Comparison of the size-dependent shear stress between microcompression and microtensile testing data of single-crystal Cu at 10% strain. The data was taken from Refs. [5,15,16] (microcompression testing) and [14] (microtensile testing). Figure 2. Technical shear stress vs. strain curves for Cuh2 3 4i microtensile samples with side length of 3 lm and aspect ratios ranging from 1:1 to 13.5:1. A considerably higher flow stress is only observed for the sample with an aspect ratio of 1:1. cent. For a detailed analysis of single-crystal Cu see e.g. Ref. [18]. However, no difference between tension and compression is expected for monotonic loading if frictional influences and end effects are minimized. Atomistic simulations of nanowires showed a difference between tension and compression. Zimmermann and co-workers [19,20] pointed out the influence of the surface stress and surface orientation on the deformation of Au nanowires. In general, and contrary to our results, they observe higher yield stresses for tensile loading, since the tensile surface stress induces compressive stresses in the interior. Tschopp and McDowell [21] reported that Cu nanowires require higher stresses for dislocation nucleation in compression and suggested that the resolved stress normal to the slip plane influences the dislocation nucleation, thus causing the tension–compression asymmetry. It is important to notice that all these simulations are limited to specimen dimensions of several nanometres and starting configurations reflecting perfect single crystals, therefore requiring 149 homogeneous dislocation nucleation. In contrast, the specimens reported here possess micrometre dimensions and a grown-in dislocation network with a dislocation density q 1013 m2 [11]. An approach postulated by Gil Sevillano et al. [22] predicts a dependence of the flow stresses on the sample dimension. Considering the analogy between dislocation glide and a fluid percolating a porous medium, Gil Sevillano predicted a transition from dislocation motion by pinning–depinning to swapping of the entire glide plane. While the former is size-independent and governed by the obstacle spacing, the latter scales with a power-law exponent of 3/4. The transition length dc is dependent on the dislocation density and leads for the investigated single-slip configuration to a critical dimension dc 8.5 lm. There is a difference in sample length between microcompression and microtensile testing, but the critical dimension in terms of the sample diameter is the same for the two types of experiment. Considering a single-ended dislocation source in a microcrystal, Rao et al. [23] depicted different source strengths depending on the loading direction of the source using three-dimensional discrete dislocation dynamics simulations. In their study the influence of the loading direction is mainly given by the different critical configurations required to overcome the dislocation source, leading to different stress values for forward and reverse activation. For a Poisson’s ratio of 0.33 a difference by a factor 2 was found for Ni, which could partially account for the different stress levels in microcompression and microtension testing. In order to shed light on this phenomenon we prepared single-crystal Cu tensile samples with a h2 3 4i loading direction which were tested in tension and compression. The intention of this approach is to investigate whether the origin of the observed discrepancy in Figure 1 is a physical effect or caused by the measuring method. To exclude a possible influence of the sample aspect ratio in this load reversal test, a systematic study of the influence of the aspect ratio on the mechanical response of micron-sized uniaxially loaded specimens was required in advance. All investigated specimens had a side length of 3 lm and aspect ratios ranging from 1:1 to 13.5:1. Sample fabrication was performed under grazing ion impact using a FIB (Zeiss 1540 XB) operated at 30 kV. For sample finishing a final Ga+ ion current of 100 pA was applied. Since microcompression samples are in general shorter than microtensile specimens in order to prevent plastic buckling, a systematic variation of the sample length was performed for microtensile specimens. These experiments were aimed at investigating the influence of the aspect ratio and to check whether this boundary condition has a strong effect on the mechanical response. The resulting engineering shear stress vs. strain curves are shown in Figure 2. For aspect ratios between 2:1 and 13.5:1 there is no pronounced impact of the aspect ratio on the flow stress. There is a slight trend that samples with higher aspect ratio depict lower flow stresses. This can be explained by an altered stress state of the short samples due to edge effects or by considering a weaklink statistic. Since the differences are of the order of the experimental scatter known for this kind of test [3], no quantification is attempted. Only for an aspect 150 D. Kiener et al. / Scripta Materialia 60 (2009) 148–151 ratio of 1:1 is a clear increase in the flow stress in conjunction with a suppression of distinct load drops observed. Comparable results were reported previously for micro-tensile samples with side lengths ranging from 0.5 to 8 lm [14] and were explained by the limited free glide of dislocations over the sample cross-section resulting in a dislocation pile-up. To directly check the influence of the loading direction, a special tension/compression experiment with a microtensile sample having an aspect ratio of 2:1, comparable to typically tested microcompression samples, was performed. The specimen was loaded in situ in displacement-controlled open loop mode with six intentional unloading cycles applied with a microindenter (ASMEC UNAT) mounted in a scanning electron microscope (SEM; Zeiss LEO Stereoscan 440) equipped with a microgripper. The details of this method are described elsewhere [14]. After straining, the sample was examined in a high-resolution SEM (Zeiss LEO 1525) and parts of the sample head were removed by FIB milling to simplify the compression test alignment. Subsequently, the microgripper was replaced by a flat diamond tip with a diameter of 20 lm, and the prestrained sample was compressed in a displacement-controlled open loop without unloading cycles. The technical shear stress vs. strain curves for both loading steps are shown in Figure 3. The microcompression data starts at the strain upon unloading of the tensile sample. Note that global flow commences at the same stress level as reached in pure tensile straining. After tensile straining to e = 0.22 the specimen started to deform in multiple slip, which is indicated by an increased apparent hardening rate. This hardening continues during the subsequent compression testing. The in situ images taken during deformation reveal that within the first few per cent of compressive loading a visible reduction in the large glide step which had formed in the centre of the tensile specimen occurs (see insets in Fig. 3). This implies that, within the resolution limits of the SEM, glide Figure 3. Technical shear stress vs. strain data for a Cuh2 3 4i microtensile sample with 3 lm side length and an aspect ratio of 2:1. After straining to e = 0.27 with six intentional unloading cycles, parts of the sample head were removed. The same specimen was subsequently compressed without unloading. The compression data starts at the strain upon unloading the tensile sample. occurs on the same glide plane but now in the opposite direction. In stark contrast to Figure 1, the experiment depicted in Figure 3 revealed no difference between microtensile and microcompression testing. This result was confirmed by another microtension/compression sample of similar dimensions which was first compressed and then strained in tension. Moreover, our observations do not support the model of Rao et al. [23] for the given experiment, assuming the same source was operated in opposite directions at a comparable stress level. Additionally, considering the results from Figure 2, the influences of the aspect ratio can be excluded. From the previous results, no mechanisms inherent to the material itself seem to be responsible for the differences depicted in Figure 1. As we have thus excluded effects due to the material itself, the question arises whether the fabrication process affects the material properties. Recent publications by Bei et al. pointed out that FIB milling introduced dislocation sources into formerly defect-free Mo whiskers [24,25], thus significantly lowering their strength. In contrast, Shan et al. observed a process termed mechanical annealing [26] in which compressive loading removed the FIB-generated defects from Ni samples. In both cases no difference is expected between compression and tension, but experimental proof is so far lacking. Additionally, several hardening mechanisms could be attributed to the FIBgenerated defects [27]. But again, this should not lead to differences in the flow stresses measured in tension and compression. Instead, it appears more advisable to consider how the experimental constraints affect the depicted results. Evidently, the presented short microcompression samples are still connected to the stiff bulk material, while the microtensile specimens are situated on the tip of a laterally compliant needle. A schematic drawing depicting the different situations is given in Figure 4. Three important differences are obvious: (i) the low lateral stiffness of a microtensile specimen on a long needle; (ii) the adjustable aspect ratio in microtensile testing; (iii) the different contact situation between sample and flat punch/gripper, respectively. Figure 4. Schematic drawing depicting the different macroscopic sample dimensions resulting in different lateral compliances between microtensile testing (a) and microcompression testing (b). D. Kiener et al. / Scripta Materialia 60 (2009) 148–151 (i) It was shown by Diehl for macroscopic Cu single crystals that the lateral compliance of the testing machine has a strong influence on the measured stress vs. strain curve. While free crosshead movement resulted in a lower critical shear stress and single-slip deformation, restricted crosshead movement suppressed stage I glide, leading to higher critical shear stress values and higher hardening rates [28]. A similar situation is present in the case of common microcompression testing, since friction between sample top and flat punch is unavoidable. Furthermore, free lateral movement is hard to realize for conventional nanoindenter systems, which are designed to be as stiff as possible. The microtensile approach reflects a specimen on a compliant sample base tested by a stiff machine. This statement also holds true for the observations reported by Gruber et al. [17]. Reducing the constraint of lateral fixation results naturally in lower stresses required for deformation. The influence of the system stiffness on the mechanical response of microcompression samples was demonstrated by placing a microcompression specimen on a needle tip [16]. This also resulted in clearly reduced flow stresses which nearly match the flow stresses of microtensile samples. It is worth noting that, while the results from Diehl are in qualitative agreement with our experimental findings, there is a significant difference in the values of the determined shear stresses. This can be explained by the three orders of magnitude difference in sample size, leading to larger operating dislocation sources for the bulk single crystals. (ii) The higher aspect ratios possible for microtensile samples provide additional lateral compliance. This effect is not very pronounced for the results presented here due to the compliant needle, but is expected to be more pronounced for tensile specimens connected to a stiff bulk material. (iii) Using in situ Laue [29] and postmortem electron backscatter diffraction [15], crystal rotations indicating a dislocation pile-up were observed for microcompression samples close to the sample top, while only slight crystal rotations caused by the fixed sample ends were observed for microtensile specimens [14]. 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