Shear-banding Induced Indentation Size Effect in Metallic Glasses

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Abstract

Shear-banding is commonly regarded as the "plasticity carrier" of metallic glasses (MGs), which usually causes severe strain localization and catastrophic failure if unhindered. However, through the use of the high-throughput dynamic nanoindentation technique, here we reveal that nano-scale shear-banding in different MGs evolves from a "distributed" fashion to a "localized" mode when the resultant plastic flow extends over a critical length scale. Consequently, a pronounced indentation size effect arises from the distributed shear-banding but vanishes when shear-banding becomes localized. Based on the critical length scales obtained for a variety of MGs, we unveil an intrinsic interplay between elasticity and fragility that governs the nanoscale plasticity transition in MGs. Our current findings provide a quantitative insight into the indentation size effect and transition mechanisms of nano-scale plasticity in MGs.

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Lu, Y. M., Sun, B. A., Zhao, L. Z., Wang, W. H., Pan, M. X., Liu, C. T., & Yang, Y. (2016). Shear-banding Induced Indentation Size Effect in Metallic Glasses. Scientific Reports, 6. https://doi.org/10.1038/srep28523

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