Publication | Closed Access
Structural origin underlying poor glass forming ability of Al metallic glass
32
Citations
40
References
2011
Year
EngineeringGlass-forming LiquidMechanical EngineeringGlass MaterialPoor Thermal StabilityChemistryGlass EngineeringAl Metallic GlassStructural OriginGlass-ceramicGlass TransitionMaterials ScienceMaterials EngineeringCrystallographyGlass FormationMicrostructureAmorphous MetalPoor GlassApplied PhysicsMolecular Dynamics SimulationsAmorphous SolidMechanics Of Materials
We performed molecular dynamics simulations to study the glass formation and local atomic structure of rapidly quenched Al. Both potential energy and structural parameters indicate that the glass transition temperature of amorphous Al is as low as 300 K, which may lead to the poor thermal stability of the amorphous Al as it is prone to crystallize even at room temperature. Voronoi polyhedra analysis reveals that the most popular polyhedron is the deformed body-centered cubic (bcc) cluster characterized by the index < 0, 3, 6, 4 > in the amorphous Al, while the icosahedron with the index < 0, 0, 12, 0 > is always predominant in bulk metallic glass formers with excellent glass forming ability (GFA). Moreover, these deformed-bcc short-range orders can make up medium-range orders via the linkage of vertex-, edge-, face-, intercrossed-shared atoms, which are believed to more easily transform into face-centered cubic (fcc) Al nanocrystal compared with the icosahedral clusters in terms of the symmetrical similarity between bcc and fcc structures. This finding could unveil the structural origin of poor GFA of Al-based alloys.
| Year | Citations | |
|---|---|---|
Page 1
Page 1