Heterogeneities in Metallic Glasses: Atomistic Computer Simulations on the Structure and Mechanical Properties of Copper–Zirconium Alloys and Composites

The present thesis deals with molecular dynamics computer simulations of heterogeneities in copper–zirconium metallic glasses, ranging from intrinsic structural fluctuations to crystalline secondary phases. These heterogeneities define, on a microscopic scale, the properties of the glass, and an und...

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Main Author: Brink, Tobias
Format: Others
Language:en
Published: 2017
Online Access:https://tuprints.ulb.tu-darmstadt.de/5858/7/thesis-brink.pdf
Brink, Tobias <http://tuprints.ulb.tu-darmstadt.de/view/person/Brink=3ATobias=3A=3A.html> (2017): Heterogeneities in Metallic Glasses: Atomistic Computer Simulations on the Structure and Mechanical Properties of Copper–Zirconium Alloys and Composites.Darmstadt, Technische Universität Darmstadt, [Ph.D. Thesis]
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spelling ndltd-tu-darmstadt.de-oai-tuprints.ulb.tu-darmstadt.de-58582020-07-29T05:11:21Z http://tuprints.ulb.tu-darmstadt.de/5858/ Heterogeneities in Metallic Glasses: Atomistic Computer Simulations on the Structure and Mechanical Properties of Copper–Zirconium Alloys and Composites Brink, Tobias The present thesis deals with molecular dynamics computer simulations of heterogeneities in copper–zirconium metallic glasses, ranging from intrinsic structural fluctuations to crystalline secondary phases. These heterogeneities define, on a microscopic scale, the properties of the glass, and an understanding of their nature and behaviour is required for deriving the proper structure–property relations. In terms of composite systems, we start with the amorphisation of copper nanolayers embedded in a metallic glass matrix. While copper is an fcc metal with a high propensity for crystallisation, amorphisation can in fact occur in such systems for thermodynamic reasons. This is due to interface effects, which are also known from heterogeneous interfaces in crystals or from grain boundary complexions, although in absence of lattice mismatch. In single-phase glasses, intrinsic heterogeneities are often discussed in terms of soft spots or geometrically unfavourable motifs (GUMs), which can be considered to be mechanically weaker, defective regions of the glass. We investigate the relation between these motifs and the boson peak, an anomaly in the vibrational spectrum of all glasses. We demonstrate a relation between the boson peak and soft spots by analysing various amorphous and partially amorphous samples as well as high-entropy alloys. Finally, we treat the plastic deformation of glasses, with and without crystalline secondary phases. We propose an explanation for the experimentally observed variations of propagation direction, composition, and density along a shear band. These variations of propagation direction are small in the case of single-phase glasses. A considerably greater influence on shear band propagation can be exerted by precipitates. We systematically investigate composites ranging from low crystalline volume fraction up to systems which resemble a nanocrystalline metal. In this context, we derive a mechanism map for composite systems and observe the breakdown of these mechanisms with increasing crystalline volume fraction during the transition towards the nanocrystalline state. 2017 Ph.D. Thesis NonPeerReviewed text CC-BY-SA 4.0 International - Creative Commons, Attribution Share-alike https://tuprints.ulb.tu-darmstadt.de/5858/7/thesis-brink.pdf Brink, Tobias <http://tuprints.ulb.tu-darmstadt.de/view/person/Brink=3ATobias=3A=3A.html> (2017): Heterogeneities in Metallic Glasses: Atomistic Computer Simulations on the Structure and Mechanical Properties of Copper–Zirconium Alloys and Composites.Darmstadt, Technische Universität Darmstadt, [Ph.D. Thesis] en info:eu-repo/semantics/doctoralThesis info:eu-repo/semantics/openAccess
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language en
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description The present thesis deals with molecular dynamics computer simulations of heterogeneities in copper–zirconium metallic glasses, ranging from intrinsic structural fluctuations to crystalline secondary phases. These heterogeneities define, on a microscopic scale, the properties of the glass, and an understanding of their nature and behaviour is required for deriving the proper structure–property relations. In terms of composite systems, we start with the amorphisation of copper nanolayers embedded in a metallic glass matrix. While copper is an fcc metal with a high propensity for crystallisation, amorphisation can in fact occur in such systems for thermodynamic reasons. This is due to interface effects, which are also known from heterogeneous interfaces in crystals or from grain boundary complexions, although in absence of lattice mismatch. In single-phase glasses, intrinsic heterogeneities are often discussed in terms of soft spots or geometrically unfavourable motifs (GUMs), which can be considered to be mechanically weaker, defective regions of the glass. We investigate the relation between these motifs and the boson peak, an anomaly in the vibrational spectrum of all glasses. We demonstrate a relation between the boson peak and soft spots by analysing various amorphous and partially amorphous samples as well as high-entropy alloys. Finally, we treat the plastic deformation of glasses, with and without crystalline secondary phases. We propose an explanation for the experimentally observed variations of propagation direction, composition, and density along a shear band. These variations of propagation direction are small in the case of single-phase glasses. A considerably greater influence on shear band propagation can be exerted by precipitates. We systematically investigate composites ranging from low crystalline volume fraction up to systems which resemble a nanocrystalline metal. In this context, we derive a mechanism map for composite systems and observe the breakdown of these mechanisms with increasing crystalline volume fraction during the transition towards the nanocrystalline state.
author Brink, Tobias
spellingShingle Brink, Tobias
Heterogeneities in Metallic Glasses: Atomistic Computer Simulations on the Structure and Mechanical Properties of Copper–Zirconium Alloys and Composites
author_facet Brink, Tobias
author_sort Brink, Tobias
title Heterogeneities in Metallic Glasses: Atomistic Computer Simulations on the Structure and Mechanical Properties of Copper–Zirconium Alloys and Composites
title_short Heterogeneities in Metallic Glasses: Atomistic Computer Simulations on the Structure and Mechanical Properties of Copper–Zirconium Alloys and Composites
title_full Heterogeneities in Metallic Glasses: Atomistic Computer Simulations on the Structure and Mechanical Properties of Copper–Zirconium Alloys and Composites
title_fullStr Heterogeneities in Metallic Glasses: Atomistic Computer Simulations on the Structure and Mechanical Properties of Copper–Zirconium Alloys and Composites
title_full_unstemmed Heterogeneities in Metallic Glasses: Atomistic Computer Simulations on the Structure and Mechanical Properties of Copper–Zirconium Alloys and Composites
title_sort heterogeneities in metallic glasses: atomistic computer simulations on the structure and mechanical properties of copper–zirconium alloys and composites
publishDate 2017
url https://tuprints.ulb.tu-darmstadt.de/5858/7/thesis-brink.pdf
Brink, Tobias <http://tuprints.ulb.tu-darmstadt.de/view/person/Brink=3ATobias=3A=3A.html> (2017): Heterogeneities in Metallic Glasses: Atomistic Computer Simulations on the Structure and Mechanical Properties of Copper–Zirconium Alloys and Composites.Darmstadt, Technische Universität Darmstadt, [Ph.D. Thesis]
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