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Probing Mechanics at Nanoscale Dimensions

Probing Mechanics at Nanoscale Dimensions

Probing Mechanics at Nanoscale Dimensions

Volume 1185:
Nobumichi Taumura, Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory, California
Andrew Minor, University of California, Berkeley
Conal Murray, IBM T J Watson Research Center, New York
Lawrence Friedman, Pennsylvania State University
June 2014
1185
November 2009
Unavailable - out of print
Paperback
9781107408197
Out of Print
Paperback
GBP
Hardback

    Mechanical properties and the reliability of materials greatly depend on the details of their microstructure. However, most engineered materials, which are often polycrystalline and multiphase in nature and have undergone an extensive amount of processing, are extremely complex and inhomogeneous at the local level. The precise relationship between microstructure and physical properties for these types of materials is an issue that becomes even more critical as device dimensions rapidly decrease toward the nanoscale. Recently new experimental tools have emerged that provide information on the microstructure and state of deformation of materials at a fine spatial resolution, ranging from microns down to tens of nanometers. In parallel, developments in computational materials simulation now incorporate discretization into modeling, which is necessary in obtaining a thorough multiscale, theoretical understanding of material properties. This book offers views on defining and measuring stress, strain, and deformation of materials at the appropriate microstructural level of grain, grain boundaries and other defects.

    Product details

    June 2014
    November 2009
    Paperback
    9781107408197
    136 pages
    229 × 152 × 7 mm
    0.19kg
    Unavailable - out of print
      Editors
    • Nobumichi Taumura , Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory, California
    • Andrew Minor , University of California, Berkeley
    • Conal Murray , IBM T J Watson Research Center, New York
    • Lawrence Friedman , Pennsylvania State University