Abstract

Bulk metallic glasses (BMGs) generally fail in a brittle manner under uniaxial, quasistatic loading at room temperature. The lack of plastic strain is a consequence of shear softening, a phenomenon that originates from shear-induced dilation that causes plastic strain to be highly localized in shear bands. So far, significant tensile ductility has been reported only for microscopic samples of around 100 nm (ref. 4) as well as for high strain rates, and so far no mechanisms are known, which could lead to work hardening and ductility in quasistatic tension in macroscopic BMG samples. In the present work we developed CuZr-based BMGs, which polymorphically precipitate nanocrystals during tensile deformation and subsequently these nanocrystals undergo twinning. The formation of such structural heterogeneities hampers shear band generation and results in macroscopically detectable plastic strain and work hardening. The precipitation of nanocrystals and their subsequent twinning can be understood in terms of a deformation-induced softening of the instantaneous shear modulus. This unique deformation mechanism is believed to be not just limited to CuZr-based BMGs but also to promote ductility in other BMGs.

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