Projects per year
Abstract
It has been decade-long and enduring efforts to decipher the structural mechanism of plasticity in metallic glasses; however, it still remains a challenge to directly reveal the structural change, if any, that precedes; and dominant plastics flow in them. Here, by using the dynamic atomic force microscope as an “imaging” as well as a “forcing” tool, we unfold a real-time sequence of structural evolution occurring on the surface of an Au-Si thin film metallic glass. In sharp contrast to the common notion that plasticity comes along with mechanical softening in bulk metallic glasses, our experimental results directly reveal three types of nano-sized surface regions, which undergo plasticity but exhibit different characters of structural evolution following the local plasticity events, including stochastic structural rearrangement, unusual local relaxation and rejuvenation. As such, yielding on the metallic-glass surface manifests as a dynamic equilibrium between local relaxation and rejuvenation as opposed to shear instability in bulk metallic-glasses. Our finding demonstrates that plasticity on the metallic glass surface of Au-Si metallic glass bears much resemblance to that of the colloidal gels, of which nonlinear rheology rather than shear instability governs the constitutive behavior of plasticity.
| Original language | English |
|---|---|
| Article number | 095304 |
| Journal | Journal of Applied Physics |
| Volume | 121 |
| Issue number | 9 |
| Online published | 2 Mar 2017 |
| DOIs | |
| Publication status | Published - 7 Mar 2017 |
Publisher's Copyright Statement
- COPYRIGHT TERMS OF DEPOSITED FINAL PUBLISHED VERSION FILE: This article may be downloaded for personal use only. Any other use requires prior permission of the author and AIP Publishing. This article appeared in Y. M. Lu, J. F. Zeng, J. C. Huang, S. Y. Kuan, T. G. Nieh, W. H. Wang, M. X. Pan, C. T. Liu, and Y. Yang, "In-situ atomic force microscopy observation revealing gel-like plasticity on a metallic glass surface", Journal of Applied Physics 121, 095304 (2017) and may be found at https://doi.org/10.1063/1.4977856.
Fingerprint
Dive into the research topics of 'In-situ atomic force microscopy observation revealing gel-like plasticity on a metallic glass surface'. Together they form a unique fingerprint.Projects
- 1 Finished
-
GRF: Structural Relaxation in Metallic Glass and Metallic-Glass Matrix Composite: From Macro- to Nano-Scale
YANG, Y. (Principal Investigator / Project Coordinator), Wang, W. H. (Co-Investigator) & Wang, Q. (Co-Investigator)
1/01/15 → 10/12/18
Project: Research