Abstract
Metallic glasses are metallic alloys that exhibit exotic material properties. They may have fractal structures at the atomic level, but a physical mechanism for their organization without ordering has not been identified.We demonstrated a crossover between fractal short-range (<2 atomic diameters) and homogeneous long-range structures using in situ x-ray diffraction, tomography, and molecular dynamics simulations. A specific class of fractal, the percolation cluster, explains the structural details for several metallic-glass compositions. We postulate that atoms percolate in the liquid phase and that the percolating cluster becomes rigid at the glass transition temperature.
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CITATION STYLE
Chen, D. Z., Shi, C. Y., An, Q., Zeng, Q., Mao, W. L., Goddard, W. A., & Greer, J. R. (2015). Fractal atomic-level percolation in metallic glasses. Science, 349(6254), 1306–1310. https://doi.org/10.1126/science.aab1233
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