Borrowed dislocations for ductility in ceramics
Beijing University of Technology · Advanced Ceramics Manufacturing (United States) · +2 more institutions
Abstract
The inherent brittleness of ceramics, primarily due to restricted atomic motions from rigid ionic or covalent bonded structures, is a persistent challenge. This characteristic hinders dislocation nucleation in ceramics, thereby impeding the enhancement of plasticity through a dislocation-engineering strategy commonly used in metals. Finding a strategy that continuously generates dislocations within ceramics may enhance plasticity. Here, we propose a "borrowing-dislocations" strategy that uses a tailored interfacial structure with well-ordered bonds. Such an approach enables ceramics to have greatly improved tensile ductility by mobilizing a considerable number of dislocations in ceramic borrowed from metal…
Citation impact
- FWCI
- 27.94
- Percentile
- 100%
- References
- 48
Authors
8- LDLimin DongCorresponding
Beijing University of Technology, Advanced Ceramics Manufacturing (United States), University of Hong Kong
- JZJie ZhangCorresponding
Advanced Ceramics Manufacturing (United States)
- YLYizhuang LiCorresponding
University of Hong Kong
- YGYixuan Gao
University of Science and Technology Beijing
- MWM. Wang
University of Hong Kong
Topics & keywords
- Ductility (Earth science)
- Ceramic
- Materials science
- Composite material
- Creep