Litcius/Paper detail

Challenging the ideal strength limit in single-crystalline gold nanoflakes through phase engineering

Tong Zhang, Yuanbiao Tong, Chenxinyu Pan, Jun Pei, Xiaomeng Wang, Tao Liu, Binglun Yin, Pan Wang, Yang Gao, Limin Tong, Wei Yang

2025Nature Communications15 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Materials usually fracture before reaching their ideal strength limits. Meanwhile, materials with high strength generally have poor ductility, and vice versa. For example, gold with the conventional face-centered cubic (FCC) phase is highly ductile while the yield strength (~102 MPa) is significantly lower than its ideal theoretical limit. Here, through phase engineering, we show that defect-free single-crystalline gold nanoflakes with the hexagonal close-packed (HCP) phase can exhibit a strength of 6.0 GPa, which is beyond the ideal theoretical limit of the conventional FCC counterpart. The lattice structure is thickness-dependent and the FCC-HCP phase transformation happens in the range of 11–13 nm. Suspended-nanoindentations based on atomic force microscopy (AFM) show that the Young’s modulus and tensile strength are also thickness-and phase- dependent. The maximum strength is reached in HCP nanoflakes thinner than 10 nm. First-principles and molecular dynamics (MD) calculations demonstrate that the mechanical properties arise from the unconventional HCP structure as well as the strong surface effect. Our study provides valuable insights into the fabrication of nanometals with extraordinary mechanical properties through phase engineering. Gold with FCC phase is very ductile, while the yield strength is well below the theoretical limit. Here, the authors report on the mechanical properties of single-crystalline gold nanoflakes with HCP phase that illustrate the benefits of phase engineering.

Topics & Concepts

Ideal (ethics)Limit (mathematics)Phase (matter)NanotechnologyMaterials scienceChemistryMathematicsPolitical scienceLawMathematical analysisOrganic chemistryAnodic Oxide Films and NanostructuresCopper-based nanomaterials and applicationsnanoparticles nucleation surface interactions
Challenging the ideal strength limit in single-crystalline gold nanoflakes through phase engineering | Litcius