Silicon is usually considered a brittle material. However, under specific conditions, such as high temperature, high confining pressure, and complex loading patterns involved in surface machining or microindentation, extremely localized regions with plastic deformation may show up. Herein this paper, we demonstrate the possibility to induce a permanent deformation field extending over macroscopically wide regions, with no need for extreme load. Indeed, this is obtained at room temperature upon applying a relatively small pressure onto single crystal silicon slices machined with a pre-notch at the bottom surface. To deeply characterize the deformed region, which is visible to the naked eye, we adopted an experimental multiscale approach, which involves a combination of optical microscopy and profilometry, Raman spectroscopy, and Electron Backscatter Diffraction (EBSD). Overall, the results collected via different techniques show, in a consistent fashion, that our proposed methodology is an effective engineering pathway to induce controlled permanent deformation in silicon samples, whose effects can be observed across different length scales, from macro to nano.

Permanent, macroscopic deformation of single crystal silicon by mild loading

Spiess R.;
2023

Abstract

Silicon is usually considered a brittle material. However, under specific conditions, such as high temperature, high confining pressure, and complex loading patterns involved in surface machining or microindentation, extremely localized regions with plastic deformation may show up. Herein this paper, we demonstrate the possibility to induce a permanent deformation field extending over macroscopically wide regions, with no need for extreme load. Indeed, this is obtained at room temperature upon applying a relatively small pressure onto single crystal silicon slices machined with a pre-notch at the bottom surface. To deeply characterize the deformed region, which is visible to the naked eye, we adopted an experimental multiscale approach, which involves a combination of optical microscopy and profilometry, Raman spectroscopy, and Electron Backscatter Diffraction (EBSD). Overall, the results collected via different techniques show, in a consistent fashion, that our proposed methodology is an effective engineering pathway to induce controlled permanent deformation in silicon samples, whose effects can be observed across different length scales, from macro to nano.
2023
STAMPA
Inglese
Inglese
34
5
ELSEVIER
Internazionale
anonymous
105442
17-gen-2023
Silicon; Mechanical properties; Permanent deformation; Raman spectroscopy; EBSD
Materials Today Communications is a broad scope, multi-disciplinary, rapid-publication journal focused on sound science. Materials are an essential component of every industry and underpin the technologies used in daily life. Materials science is an ever-expanding and evolving multi-disciplinary field, encompassing aspects of physics, chemistry, biology, engineering and mathematics. Materials Today Communications is interested in papers that focus on understanding the structure-property relationship for materials, utilizing characterization methods across different length scales to understand the effect of nano-, micro- and macro-structure on mechanical, electronic and chemical properties, and applying new and existing techniques to manufacture materials with properties and applications capable of meeting the challenges society faces now and in the future. Materials Today Communications covers all aspects of materials science, publishing sound science articles on materials research. Our 'sound science' approach means we do not filter submissions based on their topic area, but on the quality of the individual manuscript. Part of the Materials Today family, Materials Today Communications offers authors rigorous peer review, rapid decisions, and high visibility. The editors welcome comprehensive articles, short communications and reviews on topics including but not limited to: Bioengineering and biomedicine Biomaterials Building materials Catalysis Composites Computational materials science Ceramics and glasses Energy Materials Engineering applications Materials characterization
www.elsevier.com/locate/mtcomm
ITALIA
no
reserved
Missale, E.; Chiappini, A.; Spiess, R.; Speranza, G.; Pantano, M. F.
01 CONTRIBUTO IN RIVISTA::01.01 - Articolo in rivista
info:eu-repo/semantics/article
5
262
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Utilizza questo identificativo per citare o creare un link a questo documento: https://hdl.handle.net/11577/3506104
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