Tuned critical avalanche scaling in bulk metallic glasses

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Abstract

Ingots of the bulk metallic glass (BMG), Zr64.13 Cu 15.75 Ni10.12 Al10 in atomic percent (at. %), are compressed at slow strain rates. The deformation behavior is characterized by discrete, jerky stress-drop bursts (serrations). Here we present a quantitative theory for the serration behavior of BMGs, which is a critical issue for the understanding of the deformation characteristics of BMGs. The mean-field interaction model predicts the scaling behavior of the distribution, D(S), of avalanche sizes, S, in the experiments. D(S) follows a power law multiplied by an exponentially-decaying scaling function. The size of the largest observed avalanche depends on experimental tuning-parameters, such as either imposed strain rate or stress. Similar to crystalline materials, the plasticity of BMGs reflects tuned criticality showing remarkable quantitative agreement with the slip statistics of slowly-compressed nanocrystals. The results imply that material-evaluation methods based on slip statistics apply to both crystalline and BMG materials.

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Antonaglia, J., Xie, X., Schwarz, G., Wraith, M., Qiao, J., Zhang, Y., … Dahmen, K. A. (2014). Tuned critical avalanche scaling in bulk metallic glasses. Scientific Reports, 4. https://doi.org/10.1038/srep04382

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