Suppressed Size Effect in Nanopillars with Hierarchical Microstructures Enabled by Nanoscale Additive Manufacturing.
Wenxin ZhangZhi LiRuoqi DangThomas T TranRebecca Anne GallivanHuajian GaoJulia R GreerPublished in: Nano letters (2023)
Studies on mechanical size effects in nanosized metals unanimously highlight both intrinsic microstructures and extrinsic dimensions for understanding size-dependent properties, commonly focusing on strengths of uniform microstructures, e.g., single-crystalline/nanocrystalline and nanoporous, as a function of pillar diameters, D . We developed a hydrogel infusion-based additive manufacturing (AM) technique using two-photon lithography to produce metals in prescribed 3D-shapes with ∼100 nm feature resolution. We demonstrate hierarchical microstructures of as-AM-fabricated Ni nanopillars ( D ∼ 130-330 nm) to be nanoporous and nanocrystalline, with d ∼ 30-50 nm nanograins subtending each ligament in bamboo-like arrangements and pores with critical dimensions comparable to d . In situ nanocompression experiments unveil their yield strengths, σ, to be ∼1-3 GPa, above single-crystalline/nanocrystalline counterparts in the D range, a weak size dependence, σ ∝ D -0.2 , and localized-to-homogenized transition in deformation modes mediated by nanoporosity, uncovered by molecular dynamics simulations. This work highlights hierarchical microstructures on mechanical response in nanosized metals and suggests small-scale engineering opportunities through AM-enabled microstructures.
Keyphrases
- molecular dynamics simulations
- photodynamic therapy
- human health
- health risk
- low dose
- health risk assessment
- room temperature
- metal organic framework
- drug delivery
- machine learning
- risk assessment
- deep learning
- mass spectrometry
- high resolution
- climate change
- atomic force microscopy
- light emitting
- hyaluronic acid
- tissue engineering
- monte carlo
- living cells