Localized crystallization in shear bands of a metallic glass

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Date
2016
Volume
6
Issue
Journal
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Publisher
[London] : Macmillan Publishers Limited, part of Springer Nature
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Abstract

Stress-induced viscous flow is the characteristic of atomic movements during plastic deformation of metallic glasses in the absence of substantial temperature increase, which suggests that stress state plays an important role in mechanically induced crystallization in a metallic glass. However, it is poorly understood. Here, we report on the stress-induced localized crystallization in individual shear bands of Zr60Al15Ni25 metallic glass subjected to cold rolling. We find that crystallization in individual shear bands preferentially occurs in the regions neighboring the amorphous matrix, where the materials are subjected to compressive stresses demonstrated by our finite element simulations. Our results provide direct evidence that the mechanically induced crystallization kinetics is closely related with the stress state. The crystallization kinetics under compressive and tensile stresses are interpreted within the frameworks of potential energy landscape and classical nucleation theory, which reduces the role of stress state in mechanically induced crystallization in a metallic glass.

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Keywords
cold stress, crystallization, kinetics, landscape, role stress
Citation
Yan, Z., Song, K., Hu, Y., Dai, F., Chu, Z., & Eckert, J. (2016). Localized crystallization in shear bands of a metallic glass. 6. https://doi.org//10.1038/srep19358
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License
CC BY 4.0 Unported