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Understanding nanomechanical response of materials represents a scientific challenge. Here, we have used in-situ electron microscopy to reveal drastic for the first time changes of structural behavior during deformation of 1-nm-wide metal rods as a function of temperature. At 300 K, stretched nanowires stay defect-free, while at 150 K, elongation is associated with planar defects. As size is reduced, energy barriers become so small that ambient thermal energy is sufficient to overcome them. Nanorods display an elastic regime until a mechanism with high enough blocking barrier can be nucleated. Ab-initio calculations revealed that contribution from surface steps overrule stacking fault energetics in nanorods, in such a way that system size and shape determines preferred fault gliding directions. This induces anisotropic behavior and, even large differences in elastic or plastic response for elongation or compression. These results provide a new framework to improve theoretical models and atomic potentials to describe the mechanical properties at nanoscale.
Stimulus-responsive shape memory materials have attracted tremendous research interests recently, with much effort focused on improving their mechanical actuation. Driven by the needs of nanoelectromechnical devices, materials with large mechanical s
In layered materials, a common mode of deformation involves buckling of the layers under tensile deformation in the direction perpendicular to the layers. The instability mechanism, which operates in elastic materials from geological to nanometer sca
In the Ge on Si model heteroepitaxial system, metal patterns on the silicon surface provide unprecedented control over the morphology of highly ordered Ge islands. Island shape including nanorods and truncated pyramids is set by the metal species and
We study a recently proposed scenario for the early universe: Subluminal Galilean Genesis. We prove that without any other matter present in the spatially flat Friedmann universe, the perturbations of the Galileon scalar field propagate with a speed
We study the size dependence of thermal conductivity in nanoscale semiconducting systems. An analytical formula including the surface scattering and the size confinement effects of phonon transport is derived. The theoretical formula gives good agree