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Dual-Phase Super-Strong and Elastic Ceramic

61

Citations

41

References

2019

Year

Abstract

Ceramic materials exhibit very high stiffness and extraordinary strength, but they typically suffer from brittleness. Amorphization and size confinement are commonly used to reinforce materials. However, the inverse Hall-Petch effect and the shear-band softening effect usually limit further improvement of their performance under a critical size. With an optimum structure design, we demonstrate that dual-phase zirconia nanowires (DP-ZrO<sub>2</sub> NWs) with nanocrystals embedded in an amorphous matrix as a strengthening phase can overcome these problems simultaneously. As a result of this structure, in situ tensile tests demonstrate that the mechanical properties have been enormously improved in a way that does not follow both the inverse Hall-Petch effect and the shear band softening effect. The elastic strain approaches ∼7%, and the ultimate strength is 3.52 GPa, accompanied by a high toughness of ∼151 MJ m<sup>-3</sup>, making the DP-ZrO<sub>2</sub> NW composite the strongest and toughest ZrO<sub>2</sub> ever achieved. The findings provide a way to improve the mechanical properties of ceramics in a controllable manner, which may serve as a pervasive approach to be broadly applied to a variety of materials.

References

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