2023-06-252023-06-25https://tore.tuhh.de/handle/11420/15499Nanoporöse Metalle, hergestellt durch Legierungskorrosion, sind makroskopische (~ 1mm – 1cm) Aggregate aus nanoskaligen (~ 5nm – 5µm), regelmäßig vernetzten Gefügebausteinen, den so genannten Ligamenten. Die Materialien weisen ein homogenes Gefüge mit extrem großem volumenspezifischen Oberflächeninhalt und einem zusammenhängenden Porenraum auf. Wegen der sehr hohen lokalen Festigkeit und der regelmäßigen Vernetzung der konstituierenden Nano-Objekte sowie der geringen Massendichte sind nanoporöse Metalle Kandidaten für feste und leichte Strukturmaterialien.The strength of nanosize objects increases with decreasing size and can approximate the theoretical shear strength. We use dealloying for creating nanoporous materials that are networks of metallic nanoscale "ligaments". These materials can be made with macroscopic dimensions and can, in principle, be shaped into engineering components comprising in the order of 1014 ligaments per mm3. Nanoporous metals also offer new opportunities for mate-rials design towards functionality. Throughout the pore space, the state of the metal surface can be reversibly modulated under control of electrical or chemical signals. This affords changes of the capillary forces and of the optical or chemical properties in the interfacial regions, strongly affecting the effective macroscopic materials behavior. So far we have addressed size-dependent strength and elasticity, the impact of the surfaces for the mechanical behavior, and the role of the network topology. In the second funding period we aim to demonstrate materials that simultaneously bring interesting mechanical behavior and novel functionality. As one instance, we have shown that nanoporous gold-based hybrid nanomaterials can exhibit an effective piezoelectric response. This is remarkable since piezoelectricity is classically restricted to ceramics.SFB 986: Teilprojekt B02 - Feste und leichte Hybridwerkstoffe auf Basis nanoporöser MetalleSFB 986: Subproject B02 - Hybrid materials based on nanoporous metal - hierachy and function