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Strain-hardening and suppression of shear-banding in rejuvenated bulk metallic glass

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  • J. Pan

    (Institute of Metal Research, Chinese Academy of Sciences)

  • Yu. P. Ivanov

    (University of Cambridge
    Far Eastern Federal University)

  • W. H. Zhou

    (Institute of Metal Research, Chinese Academy of Sciences
    University of Science and Technology of China)

  • Y. Li

    (Institute of Metal Research, Chinese Academy of Sciences)

  • A. L. Greer

    (University of Cambridge)

Abstract

Strain-hardening (the increase of flow stress with plastic strain) is the most important phenomenon in the mechanical behaviour of engineering alloys because it ensures that flow is delocalized, enhances tensile ductility and inhibits catastrophic mechanical failure1,2. Metallic glasses (MGs) lack the crystallinity of conventional engineering alloys, and some of their properties—such as higher yield stress and elastic strain limit3—are greatly improved relative to their crystalline counterparts. MGs can have high fracture toughness and have the highest known ‘damage tolerance’ (defined as the product of yield stress and fracture toughness)4 among all structural materials. However, the use of MGs in structural applications is largely limited by the fact that they show strain-softening instead of strain-hardening; this leads to extreme localization of plastic flow in shear bands, and is associated with early catastrophic failure in tension. Although rejuvenation of an MG (raising its energy to values that are typical of glass formation at a higher cooling rate) lowers its yield stress, which might enable strain-hardening5, it is unclear whether sufficient rejuvenation can be achieved in bulk samples while retaining their glassy structure. Here we show that plastic deformation under triaxial compression at room temperature can rejuvenate bulk MG samples sufficiently to enable strain-hardening through a mechanism that has not been previously observed in the metallic state. This transformed behaviour suppresses shear-banding in bulk samples in normal uniaxial (tensile or compressive) tests, prevents catastrophic failure and leads to higher ultimate flow stress. The rejuvenated MGs are stable at room temperature and show exceptionally efficient strain-hardening, greatly increasing their potential use in structural applications.

Suggested Citation

  • J. Pan & Yu. P. Ivanov & W. H. Zhou & Y. Li & A. L. Greer, 2020. "Strain-hardening and suppression of shear-banding in rejuvenated bulk metallic glass," Nature, Nature, vol. 578(7796), pages 559-562, February.
  • Handle: RePEc:nat:nature:v:578:y:2020:i:7796:d:10.1038_s41586-020-2016-3
    DOI: 10.1038/s41586-020-2016-3
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    Cited by:

    1. Hengwei Luan & Xin Zhang & Hongyu Ding & Fei Zhang & J. H. Luan & Z. B. Jiao & Yi-Chieh Yang & Hengtong Bu & Ranbin Wang & Jialun Gu & Chunlin Shao & Qing Yu & Yang Shao & Qiaoshi Zeng & Na Chen & C. , 2022. "High-entropy induced a glass-to-glass transition in a metallic glass," Nature Communications, Nature, vol. 13(1), pages 1-11, December.
    2. Yuan Wu & Di Cao & Yilin Yao & Guosheng Zhang & Jinyue Wang & Leqing Liu & Fengshou Li & Huiyang Fan & Xiongjun Liu & Hui Wang & Xianzhen Wang & Huihui Zhu & Suihe Jiang & Paraskevas Kontis & Dierk Ra, 2021. "Substantially enhanced plasticity of bulk metallic glasses by densifying local atomic packing," Nature Communications, Nature, vol. 12(1), pages 1-9, December.
    3. Ge Wu & Sida Liu & Qing Wang & Jing Rao & Wenzhen Xia & Yong-Qiang Yan & Jürgen Eckert & Chang Liu & En Ma & Zhi-Wei Shan, 2023. "Substantially enhanced homogeneous plastic flow in hierarchically nanodomained amorphous alloys," Nature Communications, Nature, vol. 14(1), pages 1-8, December.
    4. Chang Liu & Wenjun Lu & Wenzhen Xia & Chaowei Du & Ziyuan Rao & James P. Best & Steffen Brinckmann & Jian Lu & Baptiste Gault & Gerhard Dehm & Ge Wu & Zhiming Li & Dierk Raabe, 2022. "Massive interstitial solid solution alloys achieve near-theoretical strength," Nature Communications, Nature, vol. 13(1), pages 1-9, December.

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