The Role of Disorder and the Elastic Robustness of Bulk Metallic Glasses

2012 ◽  
Vol 1520 ◽  
Author(s):  
P. M. Derlet ◽  
R. Maaß

ABSTRACTDespite significant atomic-scale heterogeneity, bulk metallic glasses well below their glass transition temperature exhibit a surprisingly robust elastic regime and a sharp elastic-to-plastic transition with a yield stress that depends approximately linearly on temperature. The present work attempts to understand these features within the framework of thermally activated plasticity. The presented statistical thermal activation model, in which the number of available structural transformations scales exponentially with system size, results in two distinct temperature regimes of deformation. At temperatures close to the glass transition temperature thermally activated Newtonian plastic flow emerges, whilst at lower temperatures the deformation properties fundamentally change due to the eventual kinetic freezing of the available structural transformations. In this regime, a linear temperature dependence emerges for the stress which characterises the elastic to plastic transition. For both regimes the transition to macroscopic plastic flow corresponds to a transition from a barrier energy dominated to a barrier entropy dominated statistics. The work concludes by discussing the possible influence that kinetic freezing might have on the low temperature heterogeneous and high temperature homogeneous plasticity of bulk metallic glasses.

2004 ◽  
Vol 19 (5) ◽  
pp. 1320-1323 ◽  
Author(s):  
V. Ponnambalam ◽  
S. Joseph Poon ◽  
Gary J. Shiflet

Fe–Cr–Mo–(Y,Ln)–C–B bulk metallic glasses (Ln are lanthanides) with maximum diameter thicknesses reaching 12 mm have been obtained by casting. The high glass formability is attained despite a low reduced glass transition temperature of 0.58. The inclusion of Y/Ln is motivated by the idea that elements with large atomic sizes can destabilize the competing crystalline phase, enabling the amorphous phase to be formed. It is found that the role of Y/Ln as a fluxing agent is relatively small in terms of glass formability enhancement. The obtained bulk metallic glasses are non-ferromagnetic and exhibit high elastic moduli of approximately 180–200 GPa and microhardness of approximately 13 GPa.


2000 ◽  
Vol 644 ◽  
Author(s):  
Xiaofeng Gu ◽  
Li-qian Xing ◽  
T. C. Hufnagel

AbstractWe have prepared bulk metallic glasses of composition (HfxZr1-x)52.5Cu17.9Ni14.6Al10Ti5 (with x=0-1) by an arc melting/suction casting method. The density of these alloys increases by nearly 67% with increasing Hf content, which is advantageous for their potential use as kinetic energy armor-piercing projectile materials. The glass transition temperature and the melting temperature increase linearly with increasing Hf content. The reduced glass transition temperature (Tg/Tm) decreases from 0.64 (x=0) to 0.62 (x=1), indicating reduced glass-forming ability for the Hf- based alloy. The fracture strength in uniaxial compression at quasi-static strain rates also increases with increasing Hf content, reaching ∼ 2.2 GPa for Hf52.5Cu17.9Ni14.6Al10Ti5.


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