This Thesis has focused primarily on a novel understanding of the physical mechanisms responsible for the ion-induced bending phenomenon in metallic materials. Two distinct mechanisms were found to govern bending in 1. solid bulk and 2. nanoporous thin cantilevers.The dense solid bulk case was shown to involve the formation and accumulation of a defect structure along the samples thickness. Since the observed cantilever curvatures were too large to be attributed to the volume change generated by isolated point defects, we postulated that bending involves the formation of highly mobile interstitial clusters which diffuse and combine to form sessile clusters in the regions beyond the ion implantation zone. This hypothesis was supported by the...