Abstract

Usually, bulk metallic glasses exhibit strength values superior to conventional crystalline alloys, often combined with a large elastic limit and rather low Young's modulus. This combination of properties renders such alloys quite unique when compared to commercial materials. However, the major drawback for engineering applications is their limited room temperature ductility and toughness due to the localized deformation processes linked to shear banding, where high plastic deformation is accumulated in a very narrow region without contributing to macroscopic deformation, work hardening or yielding. In this work we report on a new class of metallic glass in a simple Cu-base alloy. Addition of 5 at.% Al increases the glass-forming ability of binary Cu 50Zr 50. The resulting Cu 47.5Zr 47.5Al 5 glass exhibits high strength (2265 MPa) together with large room temperature ductility up to 18%. After yielding a strong increase in the flow stress is observed during deformation. The structure of the metallic glass exhibits atomic-scale heterogeneities that enable easy nucleation and continuous multiplication of shear bands. The interaction and intersection of shear bands increases the flow stress of the material with further deformation, leading to a ‘work hardening’-like behavior and yields a continuous rotation of the shear angle up to fracture resulting in a high compressive ductility.

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