Scopus İndeksli Yayınlar Koleksiyonu / Scopus Indexed Publications Collection
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Article Citation - WoS: 8Citation - Scopus: 8Atomistic Insights on the Influence of Pre-Oxide Shell Layer and Size on the Compressive Mechanical Properties of Nickel Nanowires(American Institute of Physics, 2019) Aral, Gürcan; Islam, Md Mahbubul; Wang, Yun-Jiang; Ogata, Shigenobu; van Duin, Adri C. T.We used ReaxFF reactive molecular dynamics simulations to systematically investigate the effects of a pre-oxide shell layer on the mechanical properties of [001]-oriented nickel (Ni) nanowires (NWs) under the uniaxial compressive loading at room temperature. The pristine Ni NWs are considered as references to compare the mechanical properties of the oxide-coated NWs. We found that the mechanical properties of pristine Ni NWs under uniaxial compression are sensitive to both the diameter of the NWs and the pre-oxide shell layer, and their combined effect determines the overall stress and strain behaviors. The compressive strength of the pristine NWs decreases significantly with the decreasing diameter. We observe that the native defected amorphous pre-oxide shell layer with similar to 1.0 nm thickness leads to a lowering of the mechanical compressive resistivity of NWs and causes additional softening. Oxide-coated NWs exhibit a lesser size-dependent unique properties and a lower overall yield strength compared to their pristine counterparts. The reduction of the mechanical compressive yield stress and strain with the decreasing diameter is due to the substantial changes in plastic flow as well as correlated with the existence of the pre-oxide shell layer as compared to its pristine counterpart. Particularly, pre-oxide shell layers have pronounced effects on the initiation of initial dislocations to onset plastic deformation and consequently on the overall plastic response. Published under license by AIP Publishing.Article Citation - WoS: 24Citation - Scopus: 26Role of Surface Oxidation on the Size Dependent Mechanical Properties of Nickel Nanowires: a Reaxff Molecular Dynamics Study(Royal Society of Chemistry, 2017) Aral, Gürcan; Islam, Md Mahbubul; Van Duin, Adri C. T.Highly reactive metallic nickel (Ni) is readily oxidized by oxygen (O2) molecules even at low temperatures. The presence of the naturally resulting pre-oxide shell layer on metallic Ni nano materials such as Ni nanowires (NW) is responsible for degrading the deformation mechanisms and related mechanical properties. However, the role of the pre-oxide shell layer on the metallic Ni NW coupled with the complicated mechanical deformation mechanism and related properties have not yet been fully and independently understood. For this reason, the ReaxFF reactive force field for Ni/O interactions was used to investigate the effect of surface oxide layers and the size-dependent mechanical properties of Ni NWs under precisely controlled tensile loading conditions. To directly quantify the size dependent surface oxidation effect on the tensile mechanical deformation behaviour and related properties for Ni NWs, first, ReaxFF-molecular dynamics (MD) simulations were carried out to study the oxidation kinetics on the free surface of Ni NWs in a molecular O2 environment as a function of various diameters (D = 5.0, 6.5, and 8.0 nm) of the NWs, but at the same length. Single crystalline, pure metallic Ni NWs were also studied as a reference. The results of the oxidation simulations indicate that a surface oxide shell layer with limiting thickness of ∼1.0 nm was formed on the free surface of the bare Ni NW, typically via dissociation of the O-O bonds and the subsequent formation of Ni-O bonds. Furthermore, we investigated the evolution of the size-dependent intrinsic mechanical elastic properties of the core-oxide shell (Ni/NixOy) NWs by comparing them with their un-oxidized counterparts under constant uniaxial tensile loading. We found that the oxide shell layer significantly decreases the mechanical properties of metallic Ni NW as well as facilitates the initiation of plastic deformation as a function of decreasing diameter. The disordered oxide shell layer on the Ni NW's surface remarkably reduces the yield stress and Young's modulus, due to the increased softening effects with the decreasing NW diameter, compared to un-oxidized counterparts. Moreover, the onset of plastic deformation occurs at a relatively low yielding strain and stress level for the smaller diameter of oxide-coated Ni NWs in comparison to their pure counterparts. Furthermore, for pure Ni NWs, Young's modulus, the yielding stress and strain slightly decrease with the decrease in the diameter size of Ni NWs.
