Uniform tensile elongation in framed submicron metallic glass specimen in the limit of suppressed shear banding

Qingsong Deng, Yongqiang Cheng, Yonghai Yue, Lei Zhang, Ze Zhang, Xiaodong Han, Evan Ma

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

75 Scopus citations

Abstract

Metallic glasses (MGs) normally plastically deform via severe strain localization in the form of shear banding at room temperature. Here we show that, in the event of much delayed shear banding, submicron-scale MG specimens can elongate homogeneously in tension to a uniform plastic strain as large as 12% before failure, plus an estimated elastic strain of ∼5%, at a temperature close to room temperature (below 70 °C). This high deformability of MGs well below the glass transition temperature, revealed in situ using tensile testing inside a transmission electron microscope and specimens prepared via focused ion beam micromachining, is attributed to the suppression of shear banding instability due to the nanoscale samples together with a sample frame design that imparts high effective machine stiffness and confinement. We also point out that the pronounced "homogeneous" deformation reported here is a form of non-localized deformation that is different from the homogeneous viscous flow for superplastic forming at high temperatures (in the supercooled liquid state), and from the intrinsic tensile ductility (stable uniform elongation) resulting from inherent strain hardening and strain-rate hardening mechanisms in free-standing conventional crystalline metals under uniaxial tension.

Original languageEnglish
Pages (from-to)6511-6518
Number of pages8
JournalActa Materialia
Volume59
Issue number17
DOIs
StatePublished - Oct 2011
Externally publishedYes

Funding

This work was supported by National Outstanding Young Scientist Grant of China (10825419), the Key Project of C-NSF (50831001), and the National 973 Program of China (2009CB623700). Y.Q.C. and E.M. are supported at JHU by US-NSF-DMR-0904188. The authors thank Dr. W.H. Wang’s group for providing the MG samples, and Drs. Yi Li and Ju Li for stimulating discussions.

FundersFunder number
Key Project of C-NSF50831001
National Outstanding Young Scientist Grant of China10825419
National Key Research and Development Program of China2009CB623700

    Keywords

    • High elastic limit
    • Metallic glasses
    • Uniform elongation

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