Understanding the Extremely Low Fracture Toughness of Freestanding Gold Thin Films by In-situ Bulge Testing in an AFM

Preiß E, Merle B, Göken M (2017)


Publication Language: English

Publication Type: Journal article, Original article

Publication year: 2017

Journal

Book Volume: 691

Pages Range: 218-225

URI: http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S0921509317303271

DOI: 10.1016/j.msea.2017.03.037

Abstract

The fracture toughness of freestanding gold films with thicknesses between 60 nm and 320 nm was determined by bulge testing to be around 2 MPa m1/2. This surprisingly low value confirms the trend also observed for other metals that thin films exhibit only a fraction of the bulk fracture toughness. In order to understand this behavior, the fracture process of freestanding gold films with a crack introduced by focused ion beam (FIB) milling was observed in-situ in an atomic force microscope (AFM). AFM scans of the crack tip region show stable crack growth mainly along grain boundaries. Plastic deformation is localized in a narrow corridor in front of the crack tip. A large plastic zone, as one would typically expect under plane stress, is not observed. Instead, strong local necking is evidenced. We conclude that the spatial confinement of the plastic deformation is the primary reason for the low fracture toughness of metallic thin films.

Authors with CRIS profile

Additional Organisation(s)

Related research project(s)

How to cite

APA:

Preiß, E., Merle, B., & Göken, M. (2017). Understanding the Extremely Low Fracture Toughness of Freestanding Gold Thin Films by In-situ Bulge Testing in an AFM. Materials Science and Engineering A-Structural Materials Properties Microstructure and Processing, 691, 218-225. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.msea.2017.03.037

MLA:

Preiß, Eva, Benoit Merle, and Mathias Göken. "Understanding the Extremely Low Fracture Toughness of Freestanding Gold Thin Films by In-situ Bulge Testing in an AFM." Materials Science and Engineering A-Structural Materials Properties Microstructure and Processing 691 (2017): 218-225.

BibTeX: Download