Abstract

Nanoglass (NG) as a new structure-tunable material has been investigated using both experiments and computational modeling. Experimentally, inert gas condensation (IGC) is commonly employed to prepare metallic glass (MG) nanoparticles that are consolidated using cold compression to generate an NG. In computational modeling, various methods have been used to generate NGs. However, due to the high computational cost involved, heretofore modeling investigations have not followed the experimental synthesis route. In this work, we use molecular dynamics simulations to generate an NG model by consolidating IGC-prepared Cu64Zr36 nanoparticles following a workflow similar to that of experiments. The resulting structure is compared with those of NGs produced following two alternative procedures previously used: direct generation employing Voronoi tessellation and consolidation of spherical nanoparticles carved from an MG sample. We focus on the characterization of the excess free volume and the Voronoi polyhedral statistics in order to identify and quantify contrasting features of the glass-glass interfaces in the three NG samples prepared using distinct methods. Results indicate that glass-glass interfaces in IGC-based NGs are thicker and display higher structural contrast with their parent MG structure. Nanoparticle-based methods display excess free volume exceeding 4%, in agreement with experiments. IGC-prepared nanoparticles, which display Cu segregation to their surfaces, generate the highest glass-glass interface excess free volume levels and the largest relative interface volume with excess free volume higher than 3%. Voronoi polyhedral analysis indicates a sharp drop in the full icosahedral motif fraction in the glass-glass interfaces in nanoparticle-based NG as compared to their parent MG.

Highlights

  • Nanoglass (NG) as a new structure-tunable material has been investigated using both experiments and computational modeling

  • The nanoparticles in one NG are produced directly by cutting from the bulk metallic glass (MG) (MG-NG) while the other is generated by inert gas condensation (IGC) generated nanoparticles (IGC-NG), following closely the experimental route

  • As the results indicate those subtle effects result in significant contrast between the glass-glass interfaces in MG-NG and IGC-NG as shown in Figs. 4 and 6 that were previously underestimated

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Summary

Introduction

Nanoglass (NG) as a new structure-tunable material has been investigated using both experiments and computational modeling. The resulting structure is compared with those of NGs produced following two alternative procedures previously used: direct generation employing Voronoi tessellation and consolidation of spherical nanoparticles carved from an MG sample. While previous modeling of NGs has provided useful insights, the structure and mechanical behavior of NG samples, produced by consolidation of NG nanoparticles generated by IGC, inspired by the experimental procedure, still needs to be determined. We take a first step in the direction of filling the knowledge gap, and characterize the structure of a ­Cu64Zr36 NG produced by low temperature high pressure consolidation of amorphous nanoparticles synthesized by IGC, following a procedure recently r­ eported[41]. Detailed analysis of the excess free volume and prevalent polyhedral motifs of the amorphous structure is compared to that of NGs produced by consolidation of MG nanoparticles carved from a bulk MG structure and produced by Voronoi tessellation. Results indicate a significant contrast in the calculated properties among the different samples, in particular in the excess free volume at glass-glass interfaces

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