Substantially enhanced plasticity of bulk metallic glasses by densifying local atomic packing

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Abstract

Introducing regions of looser atomic packing in bulk metallic glasses (BMGs) was reported to facilitate plastic deformation, rendering BMGs more ductile at room temperature. Here, we present a different alloy design approach, namely, doping the nonmetallic elements to form densely packed motifs. The enhanced structural fluctuations in Ti-, Zr- and Cu-based BMG systems leads to improved strength and renders these solutes’ atomic neighborhoods more prone to plastic deformation at an increased critical stress. As a result, we simultaneously increased the compressive plasticity (from ∼8% to unfractured), strength (from ∼1725 to 1925 MPa) and toughness (from 87 ± 10 to 165 ± 15 MPa√m), as exemplarily demonstrated for the Zr20Cu20Hf20Ti20Ni20 BMG. Our study advances the understanding of the atomic-scale origin of structure-property relationships in amorphous solids and provides a new strategy for ductilizing BMG without sacrificing strength.

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Wu, Y., Cao, D., Yao, Y., Zhang, G., Wang, J., Liu, L., … Lu, Z. (2021). Substantially enhanced plasticity of bulk metallic glasses by densifying local atomic packing. Nature Communications, 12(1). https://doi.org/10.1038/s41467-021-26858-9

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