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Copyright Nature Publishing Group Jul 2013

Abstract

Graphene is a single-atomic-layer material with excellent mechanical properties and has the potential to enhance the strength of composites. Its two-dimensional geometry, high intrinsic strength and modulus can effectively constrain dislocation motion, resulting in the significant strengthening of metals. Here we demonstrate a new material design in the form of a nanolayered composite consisting of alternating layers of metal (copper or nickel) and monolayer graphene that has ultra-high strengths of 1.5 and 4.0 GPa for copper-graphene with 70-nm repeat layer spacing and nickel-graphene with 100-nm repeat layer spacing, respectively. The ultra-high strengths of these metal-graphene nanolayered structures indicate the effectiveness of graphene in blocking dislocation propagation across the metal-graphene interface. Ex situ and in situ transmission electron microscopy compression tests and molecular dynamics simulations confirm a build-up of dislocations at the graphene interface.

Details

Title
Strengthening effect of single-atomic-layer graphene in metal-graphene nanolayered composites
Author
Kim, Youbin; Lee, Jinsup; Yeom, Min Sun; Shin, Jae Won; Kim, Hyungjun; Cui, Yi; Kysar, Jeffrey W; Hone, James; Jung, Yousung; Jeon, Seokwoo; Han, Seung Min
Pages
2114
Publication year
2013
Publication date
Jul 2013
Publisher
Nature Publishing Group
e-ISSN
20411723
Source type
Scholarly Journal
Language of publication
English
ProQuest document ID
1373202618
Copyright
Copyright Nature Publishing Group Jul 2013