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Preparation, glass forming ability, crystallization and deformation of (zirconium, hafnium)-copper-nickel-aluminum-titanium-based bulk metallic glasses

Posted on:2004-10-24Degree:Ph.DType:Dissertation
University:The Johns Hopkins UniversityCandidate:Gu, XiaofengFull Text:PDF
GTID:1461390011970827Subject:Engineering
Abstract/Summary:
Multicomponent Zr-based bulk metallic glasses are the most promising metallic glass forming systems. They exhibit great glass forming ability and fascinating mechanical properties, and thus are considered as potential structural materials. One potential application is that they could be replacements of the depleted uranium for making kinetic energy armor-piercing projectiles, but the density of existing Zr-based alloys is too low for this application.; Based on the chemical and crystallographic similarities between Zr and Hf, we have developed two series of bulk metallic glasses with compositions of (HfxZr1−x) 52.5Cu17.9Ni14.6Al10Ti5 and (HfxZr1−x) 57Cu20Ni8Al10Ti5 ( x = 0–1) by gradually replacing Zr by Hf. Remarkably increased density and improved mechanical properties have been achieved in these alloys. In these glasses, Hf and Zr play an interchangeable role in determining the short range order. Although the glass forming ability decreases continuously with Hf addition, most of these alloys remain bulk glass-forming.; Recently, nanocomposites produced from bulk metallic glasses have attracted wide attention due to improved mechanical properties. However, their crystalline microstructure (the grain size and the crystalline volume fraction) has to be optimized. We have investigated crystallization of (Zr, Hf)-based bulk metallic glasses, including the composition dependence of crystallization paths and crystallization mechanisms. Our results indicate that the formation of high number density nanocomposites from bulk metallic glasses can be attributed to easy nucleation and slowing-down growth processes, while the multistage crystallization behavior makes it more convenient to control the microstructure evolution.; Metallic glasses are known to exhibit unique plastic deformation behavior. At low temperature and high stress, plastic flow is localized in narrow shear bands. Macroscopic investigations of shear bands (e.g., chemical etching) suggest that the internal structure of shear bands is different from that of undeformed surroundings, but the direct structural characterization of shear bands down to the atomic level has been lacking. In this work, we have used transmission electron microscopy to explore the structural and chemical changes inside the shear bands. Nanometer-scale defects (void-like and high density regions) have been identified as a result of plastic deformation. It is these defects that distinguish shear bands from undeformed regions. Processes occurring in an active shear band and after stress removal are analogous to a thermally activated relaxation except that the relaxation time is much shorter in the former case.
Keywords/Search Tags:Bulk metallic glasses, Glass forming ability, Crystallization, Shear bands, Deformation
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