Borrowed dislocations for ductility in ceramics

Author:

Dong L. R.123ORCID,Zhang J.2ORCID,Li Y. Z.3ORCID,Gao Y. X.4ORCID,Wang M.3ORCID,Huang M. X.3ORCID,Wang J. S.1ORCID,Chen K. X.4ORCID

Affiliation:

1. MOE Key Laboratory of Advanced Functional Materials, College of Materials Science and Engineering, Beijing University of Technology, Chaoyang District, Beijing 100124, China.

2. Advanced Structural Ceramics Innovation Center, YongJiang Laboratory, Ningbo 315202, China.

3. Department of Mechanical Engineering, The University of Hong Kong, Pokfulam Road, Hong Kong 999077, China.

4. State Key Laboratory for Advanced Metals and Materials, University of Science and Technology Beijing, Beijing 100083, China.

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 through the interface, thereby overcoming the challenge associated with direct dislocation nucleation within ceramics. This strategy provides a way to enhance tensile ductility in ceramics.

Publisher

American Association for the Advancement of Science (AAAS)

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