Mechanical Instability and Ideal Shear Strength of Transition Metal Carbides and Nitrides
- 27 July 2001
- journal article
- research article
- Published by American Physical Society (APS) in Physical Review Letters
- Vol. 87 (7) , 075503
- https://doi.org/10.1103/physrevlett.87.075503
Abstract
The ideal shear strength of transition metal carbides and nitrides is calculated with the use of the ab initio pseudopotential density functional method. The microscopic mechanism that limits the ideal strength is studied using full atomic and structural relaxation and the results of electronic structure calculations. It is shown that plasticity in perfect crystals can be triggered by electronic instabilities at finite strains. Our study explicitly demonstrates that the ideal strength in these materials is limited by the elastic instability which is in turn initiated by electronic instabilities. The potential application of alloy hardening due to the onset of instabilities at different strains is also discussed.Keywords
This publication has 16 references indexed in Scilit:
- Electronic mechanism of hardness enhancement in transition-metal carbonitridesNature, 1999
- Ideal Shear Strengths of fcc Aluminum and CopperPhysical Review Letters, 1999
- Relaxation of Crystals with the Quasi-Newton MethodJournal of Computational Physics, 1997
- Atomistic simulation of ideal shear strength, point defects, and screw dislocations in bcc transition metals: Mo as a prototypePhysical Review B, 1996
- Elastic constants of single-crystal transition-metal nitride films measured by line-focus acoustic microscopyJournal of Applied Physics, 1992
- First-Principles Calculation of StressPhysical Review Letters, 1983
- Pseudopotentials and Total Energy CalculationsPhysica Scripta, 1982
- Transition-metal carbidesProgress in Solid State Chemistry, 1971
- Low-Temperature Elastic Properties of ZrC and TiCJournal of Applied Physics, 1966
- Influence of Temperature, Strain Rate, Surface Condition, and Composition on the Plasticity of Transition-Metal Carbide CrystalsJournal of Applied Physics, 1964