Enhanced fracture toughness in ceramic superlattice thin films: on the role of coherency stresses and misfit dislocations
Antonia Wagner, David Holec, Paul Heinz Mayrhofer, Matthias Bartosik

TL;DR
This paper presents a linear elasticity model explaining how coherency stresses and misfit dislocations in ceramic superlattice thin films enhance fracture toughness, aligning well with experimental observations.
Contribution
It introduces a novel model linking coherency stresses and dislocation formation to fracture toughness improvements in ceramic superlattices.
Findings
Fracture toughness increases with bilayer period in thin superlattices.
Misfit dislocations relax coherency stresses, affecting toughness.
Superlattice toughness exceeds that of individual layers.
Abstract
Superlattice (SL) thin films composed of refractory ceramics unite extremely high hardness and enhanced fracture toughness; a material combination often being mutually exclusive. While the hardness enhancement obtained whentwo materials form a superlattice is well described by existing models based on dislocation mobility, the underlying mechanisms behind the increase in fracture toughness are yet to be unraveled. Here we provide a model based on linear elasticity theory to predict the fracture toughness enhancement in (semi-)epitaxial nanolayers due to coherency stresses and formation of misfit dislocations. We exemplarily study a superlattice structure composed of two cubic transition metal nitrides (TiN, CrN) on a MgO (100) single-crystal substrate. Minimization of the overall strain energy, each time a new layer is added on the nanolayered stack, allows estimating the density of…
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