In Situ Transmission Electron Microscopy for Ultrahigh Temperature Mechanical Testing of ZrO2

Nano Lett. 2020 Feb 12;20(2):1041-1046. doi: 10.1021/acs.nanolett.9b04205. Epub 2020 Jan 16.

Abstract

This work demonstrates a novel approach to ultrahigh-temperature mechanical testing using a combination of in situ nanomechanical testing and localized laser heating. The methodology is applied to characterizing and testing initially nanograined 10 mol % Sc2O3-stabilized ZrO2 up to its melting temperature. The results suggest that the low-temperature strength of nanograined, d < 50 nm, oxides is not influenced by creep. Tensile fracture of ZrO2 bicrystals produce a weak-temperature dependence suggesting that grain boundary energy dominates brittle fracture of grain boundaries even at high homologous temperatures; for example, T = 2050 °C or T ≈ 77% Tmelt. The maximum temperature for mechanical testing in this work is primarily limited by the instability of the sample, due to evaporation or melting, enabling a host of new opportunities for testing materials in the ultrahigh-temperature regime.

Keywords: Grain boundary; In situ; Nanocrystalline; Nanomechanical testing; Transmission electron microscopy; Ultrahigh temperature.