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Phase stability and the interface structure of a nanoscale Si crystallite in Al-based alloys.

Lu LuYao-Xiang GengYing-Min WangJian-Bing QiangShao-Bo Mi
Published in: Nanoscale (2022)
An atomic-scale understanding of the role of strain on the microstructural properties of nanoscale precipitates will be helpful to explore the precipitation behavior as well as the structure-property relationships in crystalline multi-phase systems. Nanoscale Si precipitates are formed in Al-based alloys prepared by selective laser melting. The phase structure and the nature of heterointerface have been characterized using advanced electron microscopy. The nanocrystalline Si mainly contains two polymorphs, diamond-cubic Si ( DC -Si) and 4H hexagonal Si (4 H -Si). Heteroepitaxy occurs at the DC -Si(111)/Al(100) and 4 H -Si(0001)/Al(100) interfaces in terms of a coincidence-site lattice model. The nanocrystalline Si undertakes tensile strain superposed by the matrix through heterointerfaces, facilitating the formation of 4 H -Si in the nanoscale crystallite, which provides a strategy for designing Si polymorphic materials by strain engineering.
Keyphrases
  • room temperature
  • atomic force microscopy
  • electron microscopy
  • mass spectrometry
  • single molecule