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Molecular dynamics (MD) studies on phase transformation and deformation behaviors in FCC metals and alloys

Posted on:2002-10-13Degree:Ph.DType:Thesis
University:California Institute of TechnologyCandidate:Qi, YueFull Text:PDF
GTID:2461390011497354Subject:Engineering
Abstract/Summary:
This thesis focused on the phase transformation and deformation behaviors in face center cubic (FCC) metals and alloys. These studies used the new quantum modified Sutton-Chen (QMSC) many-body potentials for Cu, Ni, Ag, and Au and for their alloys through simple combination rules. Various systems and processes are simulated by standard equilibrium molecular dynamics (MD), quasi-static equilibrium MD and non-equilibrium MD (NEMD), cooperated with different periodic boundary conditions. The main topics include: (1) Melting, glass formation, and crystallization processes in bulk alloys. In our simulation CuNi and pure Cu always form an FCC crystal, while Cu4Ag6 always forms glass (with Tg decreasing as the quench rate increases) due to the large atomic size difference. (2) Size effects in melting and crystallization in Ni nano clusters. There is a transition from cluster or molecular regime (where the icosahedral is the stable structure) below ∼500 atoms to a mesoscale regime (with well-defined bulk and surface properties and surface melting processes, which leads to Tm,N = Tm,B - α N−1/3) above ∼750 atoms. (3) The deformation behavior of metallic nanowires of pure Ni, NiCu and NiAu alloys, under high rates of uniaxial tensile strain, ranging from 5*108/s to 5*1010/s. We find that deformation proceeds through twinning and coherent slipping at low strain rate and amorphization at high strain rate. This research provides a new method, fast straining, to induce amorphization except fast cooling and disordering. (4) The calculation of the ½ <110> screw dislocation in nickel (Ni). We calculated the core energy of screw dislocation after dissociation is 0.5 eV/b, the annihilation process of opposite signed dislocations depends dramatically on the configurations of dissociation planes and the cross-slip energy barrier is 0.1eV/b. (5) Friction anisotropy on clean Ni(100)/(100) interface. We found that static friction coefficient on flat and incommensurate interface is close to zero (as analytical theory predicted), however, the calculation show the same anisotropic behavior as experiments on rough surface, thus explained the difference between theory and experiments.
Keywords/Search Tags:FCC, Deformation, Alloys, Molecular, /italic
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