AVS 57th International Symposium & Exhibition
    In Situ Microscopy and Spectroscopy Topical Conference Wednesday Sessions
       Session IS+AS+NS+MI-WeM

Paper IS+AS+NS+MI-WeM6
In Situ TEM Investigation into the Thermal Stability of Nanograined FCC Metals and Alloys

Wednesday, October 20, 2010, 9:40 am, Room Acoma

Session: In Situ Microscopy/Spectroscopy – In Situ Nanoscale Processes
Presenter: K. Hattar, Sandia National Laboratories
Authors: K. Hattar, Sandia National Laboratories
B.G. Clark, Sandia National Laboratories
J. Kacher, University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign
J.A. Knapp, Sandia National Laboratories
D.M. Follstaedt, Sandia National Laboratories
L.N. Brewer, Sandia National Laboratories
I.M. Robertson, University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign
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Nanostructured materials often display very unique properties related to their far-from-equilibrium nature. Due to these unique structures, many of these materials transform into other, more stable microstructures with minimal thermal excitation. This work will highlight examples of the unexpected routes taken during the microstructural evolution of pulsed-laser deposited (PLD) free-standing face-centered cubic (FCC) thin films as a function of deposition condition and annealing temperatures. A direct comparison between the grain growth dynamics observed during in situ TEM annealing experiments in PLD films of high-purity aluminum, copper, gold and nickel films, as well as aluminum-alumina alloys shows a multitude of kinetics. For high-purity systems film thickness, void density, grain size distribution, and deposition temperature were found to be the primary factors observed controlling the rate, extent, and nature of the grain growth. The growth dynamics ranged from nearly classical normal grain growth to abnormal grain growth resulting in a bimodal grain size distribution. The grain growth rate was found to be highly dependent on the materials system despite all of the films being nanograined FCC metals produced by similar PLD parameters. The investigation of the aluminum-alumina alloys produced under various compositions and deposition parameters suggests that particle pinning can be used to maintain nanostructured films, even after annealing treatments at high homologous temperatures.

In addition to investigating the grain growth dynamics and the resulting grain size distribution, the variety of internal microstructures formed from thermal annealing were evaluated. These structures ranged from intergranular voids to stacking-fault tetrahedra. An unexpected, metastable hexagonal-closed packed phase was indentified in the high-purity nickel films. These in situ TEM observations have provided key insight into the microstructural evolution of nanograined free-standing metal films and the defect structure present in the grains resulting from various growth dynamics, in addition to suggesting multiple methods to tailor the structure and the resulting properties of nanostructured free-standing films.

*This work is supported by the Division of Materials Science and Engineering, Office of Basic Energy Sciences, U.S. Department of Energy both at Sandia and under grant DE-FG02-07ER46443. Sandia National Laboratories is a multi-program laboratory operated by Sandia Corporation, a wholly owned subsidiary of Lockheed Martin company, for the U.S. Department of Energy’s National Nuclear Security Administration under contract DE-AC04-94AL85000.