Loading…

Ultrasonic-assisted plastic flow in a Zr-based metallic glass

Ultrasonic vibration can be used for the micro-molding of metallic glasses (MGs) due to stress-softening and fast surface-diffusion effects. However, the structural rearrangement under ultrasonic vibration and its impact on the mechanical response of metallic glasses remain a puzzle. In this work, t...

Full description

Saved in:
Bibliographic Details
Published in:Science China materials 2021-02, Vol.64 (2), p.448-459
Main Authors: Yuan, Chenchen, Lv, Zhuwei, Pang, Changmeng, Li, Xin, Liu, Rui, Yang, Can, Ma, Jiang, Ke, Haibo, Wang, Weihua, Shen, Baolong
Format: Article
Language:English
Subjects:
Citations: Items that this one cites
Items that cite this one
Online Access:Get full text
Tags: Add Tag
No Tags, Be the first to tag this record!
Description
Summary:Ultrasonic vibration can be used for the micro-molding of metallic glasses (MGs) due to stress-softening and fast surface-diffusion effects. However, the structural rearrangement under ultrasonic vibration and its impact on the mechanical response of metallic glasses remain a puzzle. In this work, the plastic flow of the Zr 35 Ti 30 Cu 8.25 Be 26.75 metallic glass with the applied ultrasonic-vibration energy of 140 J was investigated by nanoindentation. Both Kelvin and Maxwell-Voigt models have been adopted to analyze the structural evolution during the creep deformation. The increase of the characteristic relaxation time and the peak intensity of relaxation spectra can be found in the sample after ultrasonic vibration. It effectively improves the activation energy of atomic diffusion during the glass transition (E g ) and the growth of the crystal nucleus (E p ). A more homogenous plastic deformation with a weak loading-rate sensitivity of stress exponent is observed in the ultrasonic-vibrated sample, which coincides with the low pile-up and penetration depth as shown in the cross profile of indents. The structural rearrangement under resonance actuation demonstrated in this work might help us better understand the defect-activation mechanism for the plastic flow of amorphous systems.
ISSN:2095-8226
2199-4501
DOI:10.1007/s40843-020-1411-2