Exceptional room-temperature plasticity in amorphous alumina nanotubes fabricated by magnetic hard anodisation†
Abstract
Crystalline aluminum oxide is a brittle ceramic material. Here we show that individual alumina nanotubes with internal and external radii of ∼15 nm and ∼50 nm, respectively and lengths of the order of 100 μm can be readily separated from amorphous alumina membranes fabricated by a hard anodisation process under a magnetic field of up to 1.5 T. The ceramic nanotubes are extremely flexible and exhibit an exceptional plasticity of ±70% at room temperature without breaking. Elastic properties investigated by the double clamped beam method include a tensile strength of 4.1 GPa, corresponding to a breaking strain of 5%. These values are respectively 17 and 70 times greater than those of polycrystalline alumina fibres. The plasticity of anodic amorphous alumina helps explain the formation of ordered arrays of nanopores in the alumina membranes.