Abstract:
A theoretical model has been proposed for describing the relaxation of misfit stresses in a spherically symmetric composite core-shell nanoparticle due to the generation and expansion of rectangular prismatic dislocation loops at the internal and external interfaces. The critical conditions of the formation of these loops have been calculated for nanoparticles consisting of a relatively massive core and a thin shell. It has been shown that the generation of dislocation loops is possible when the misfit of the lattice parameters of the core and shell of the nanoparticle exceeds a critical value that depends on the nanoparticle radius, the shell thickness, the loop formation position, and the shape of loops. This condition holds for a loop in the shell when the shell thickness either lies in a specific range of small values or (for a larger misfit) is less than a critical value. For the generation of loops in the core, the shell thickness should exceed a critical value. The dislocation loops elongated along the core-shell interface are formed more readily. As the shell thickness increases at a fixed nanoparticle radius, the energetically more favorable generation of a dislocation loop occurs first from the free surface into the bulk of the shell, then from the interface into the shell, and finally from the interface into the core of the nanoparticle.