Premium
Nanolaminates Utilizing Size‐Dependent Homogeneous Plasticity of Metallic Glasses
Author(s) -
Kim JuYoung,
Jang Dongchan,
Greer Julia R.
Publication year - 2011
Publication title -
advanced functional materials
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 6.069
H-Index - 322
eISSN - 1616-3028
pISSN - 1616-301X
DOI - 10.1002/adfm.201101164
Subject(s) - materials science , plasticity , nanocrystalline material , amorphous metal , composite material , homogeneous , metal , deformation (meteorology) , nanocrystal , metallurgy , nanotechnology , thermodynamics , alloy , physics
Homogeneous plasticity in metallic glasses is generally only observed at high temperatures or in very small structures (less than ≈100 nm), so their applications for structural performance have been very limited. Here, nanolaminates with alternating layers of Cu 50 Zr 50 metallic glass and nanocrystalline Cu are synthesized and it is found that samples with an optimal composition of 112‐nm‐thick metallic‐glass layers and 16‐nm‐thick Cu layers demonstrate a maximum strength of 2.513 GPa, a value 33% greater than that predicted by the rule‐of‐mixtures and 25% better than that of pure Cu 50 Zr 50 metallic glass. Furthermore, ≈4% strain at fracture is achieved, suppressing the instantaneous catastrophic failure often associated with metallic glasses. It is postulated that this favorable combination of high strength and deformability is caused by the size‐dependent deformation‐mode transition in metallic glasses, from highly localized plasticity, leading to immediate failure in larger samples to homogeneous extension in the smaller ones.