Size effect on mechanical properties and deformation behavior of pure copper wires considering free surface grains

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Abstract

The size (grain size and specimen size) effect makes traditional macroscopic forming technology unsuitable for a microscopic forming process. In order to investigate the size effect on mechanical properties and deformation behavior, pure copper wires (diameters range from 50 µm to 500 µm) were annealed at different temperatures to obtain different grain sizes. The results show that a decrease in wire diameter leads to a reduction in tensile strength, and this change is pronounced for large grains. The elongation of the material is in linear correlation to size factor D/d (diameter/grain size), i.e., at the same wire diameter, more grains in the section bring better plasticity. This phenomenon is in relationship with the ratio of free surface grains. A surface model combined with the theory of single crystal and polycrystal is established, based on the relationship between specimen/grain size and tensile property. The simulated results show that the flow stress in micro-scale is in the middle of the single crystal model (lower critical value) and the polycrystalline model (upper critical value). Moreover, the simulation results of the hybrid model calculations presented in this paper are in good agreement with the experimental results.

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Hou, Y., Mi, X., Xie, H., Zhang, W., Huang, G., Peng, L., … Yang, Z. (2020). Size effect on mechanical properties and deformation behavior of pure copper wires considering free surface grains. Materials, 13(20), 1–11. https://doi.org/10.3390/ma13204563

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