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Dislocation-toughened ceramics. | LitMetric

AI Article Synopsis

  • Functional and structural ceramics are crucial in high-tech applications but are limited by their brittleness, making them prone to short cracks.
  • Traditional toughening methods, which rely on mobile dislocations, have been ineffective in ceramics due to their strong atomic bonds; however, new research demonstrates potential for engineering dislocation structures to enhance toughness.
  • By utilizing modern microscopy and simulations, researchers found that adjusting dislocation density can significantly improve crack resistance in ceramics, suggesting that innovative synthesis strategies could enhance their mechanical performance.

Article Abstract

Functional and structural ceramics have become irreplaceable in countless high-tech applications. However, their inherent brittleness tremendously limits the application range and, despite extensive research efforts, particularly short cracks are hard to combat. While local plasticity carried by mobile dislocations allows desirable toughness in metals, high bond strength is widely believed to hinder dislocation-based toughening of ceramics. Here, we demonstrate the possibility to induce and engineer a dislocation microstructure in ceramics that improves the crack tip toughness even though such toughening does not occur naturally after conventional processing. With modern microscopy and simulation techniques, we reveal key ingredients for successful engineering of dislocation-based toughness at ambient temperature. For many ceramics a dislocation-based plastic zone is not impossible due to some intrinsic property (e.g. bond strength) but limited by an engineerable quantity, i.e. the dislocation density. The impact of dislocation density is demonstrated in a surface near region and suggested to be transferrable to bulk ceramics. Unexpected potential in improving mechanical performance of ceramics could be realized with novel synthesis strategies.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1039/d0mh02033hDOI Listing

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