Superior Tensile Ductility in Bulk Metallic Glass with Gradient Amorphous Structure
Citations Over TimeTop 1% of 2014 papers
Abstract
Over centuries, structural glasses have been deemed as a strong yet inherently 'brittle' material due to their lack of tensile ductility. However, here we report bulk metallic glasses exhibiting both a high strength of ~2 GPa and an unprecedented tensile elongation of 2-4% at room temperature. Our experiments have demonstrated that intense structural evolution can be triggered in theses glasses by the carefully controlled surface mechanical attrition treatment, leading to the formation of gradient amorphous microstructures across the sample thickness. As a result, the engineered amorphous microstructures effectively promote multiple shear banding while delay cavitation in the bulk metallic glass, thus resulting in superior tensile ductility. The outcome of our research uncovers an unusual work-hardening mechanism in monolithic bulk metallic glasses and demonstrates a promising yet low-cost strategy suitable for producing large-sized, ultra-strong and stretchable structural glasses.
Related Papers
- → Origins of high strength and ductility combination in a Guinier-Preston zone containing Mg-Al-Ca-Mn alloy(2019)31 cited
- → 2.7 Ductility and deformability of fibre composites strengthened reinforced concrete beams(2002)2 cited
- → Determination of plastic and brittle states of “pool” bitumens(1946)6 cited
- → A Framework for Ductility in Metallic Glasses(2023)