Abstract

The temperature evolution of icosahedral medium-range order formed by interpenetrating icosahedra in CuZr metallic glassforming liquids was investigated via molecular dynamics simulations. Scaling analysis based on percolation theory was employed, and it is found that the size distribution of clusters formed by the central atoms of icosahedra at various temperatures follows a very good scaling law with the cluster number density scaled by S−τ and the cluster size S scaled by |1 − Tc/T|−1/σ, respectively. Here Tc is scaling crossover-temperature. τ and σ are scaling exponents. The critical scaling behaviour suggests that there would be a structural phase transition manifested by percolation of locally favoured structures underlying the glass transition, if the liquid could be cooled slowly enough but without crystallization intervening. Furthermore, it is revealed that when icosahedral short-range order (ISRO) extends to medium-range length scale by connection, the atomic configurations of ISROs will be optimized from distorted ones towards more regular ones gradually, which significantly lowers the energies of ISROs and introduces geometric frustration simultaneously. Both factors make key impacts on the drastic dynamic slow-down of supercooled liquids. Our findings provide direct structure-property relationship for understanding the nature of glass transition.

Highlights

  • Uncertainty for understanding the strcuture-dynamics relationships in these systems

  • It is highly desirable to develop a scaling analysis based on percolation theory to establish a quantitative description of percolation of ISROs and link to glass transition

  • Molecular dynamics simulations were performed for Cu50Zr50 with realistic interatomic potential

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Summary

Introduction

Uncertainty for understanding the strcuture-dynamics relationships in these systems. it is highly desirable to develop a scaling analysis based on percolation theory to establish a quantitative description of percolation of ISROs and link to glass transition. Graph theory was introduced to characterize the the clusters formed by the central atoms of interpenetrating ISROs at different temperatures as the CuZr metallic glass-forming liquids are cooled down, and the equilibrium cluster size distribution was analyzed.

Results
Conclusion

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