The mechanical behavior of metallic core–shell nanoparticles is critical for their use as reinforcement particles and additive manufacturing feedstocks, yet their deformation mechanisms remain incompletely understood. This study employs molecular dynamics simulations to investigate the compressive response of a Cu-core/Al-shell nanoparticle and compares it with solid Cu, solid Al, and a hollow Al shell of the same size under uniaxial loading along ⟨100⟩, ⟨110⟩, ⟨111⟩, and ⟨112⟩ directions. The single-material nanoparticles show strong anisotropy: solid Cu exhibits orientation-dependent transitions from dislocation slip to deformation twinning, while introducing a void to form a hollow Al shell reduces stiffness and strength, confines plasticity to the shell wall, and suppresses extended load-bearing twins. The Cu–Al core–shell nanoparticle combines these behaviors in an orientation-dependent manner. Under ⟨110⟩ and ⟨112⟩ loading, deformation is largely shell-dominated, whereas ⟨100⟩ and ⟨111⟩ loading more strongly activates the Cu core. Mechanistically, ⟨100⟩ is characterized by Shockley partial activity and junction/lock formation in the Al shell coupled with twinning in the Cu core; ⟨110⟩ shows primarily shell partials with limited core involvement; ⟨111⟩ promotes partial-dislocation activity in both shell and core; and ⟨112⟩ produces localized, twin-dominated bands in the Al shell with shell-thickness-dependent twin extension into the Cu core. These trends are rationalized using Schmid factor considerations for 111⟨110⟩ slip and 111⟨112⟩ partial/twinning shear, together with the effects of faceted free surfaces and the Cu–Al interface. The core–shell geometry enables two concurrent interface-mediated pathways, i.e., (i) stress transfer and reduced cross-interface transmission and (ii) circumferential bypass within the shell, which together yield only slight flow-stress increases over solid Al while markedly reducing stress serrations compared with both solid Cu and solid Al. Across all orientations, the core–shell structures also exhibit delayed yielding (higher yield strain) relative to solid Cu, indicating enhanced ductility. The results provide an atomistic basis for designing Cu–Al core–shell nanoparticles for robust particle-based processing and additive manufacturing feedstock, and for informing multiscale models with mechanism-resolved, orientation-dependent inputs.
Tomich et al. (Tue,) studied this question.