Intrinsic plasticity or brittleness of metallic glasses
Case Western Reserve University · Institute of Physics · +1 more institution
Abstract
Abstract The intrinsic plasticity or brittleness of crystalline metals correlates with the ratio of the elastic shear modulus μ to the bulk modulus B; when the ratio μ/B exceeds a critical value, the metal is brittle. Sufficient data on elastic moduli and toughness are now available to permit an assessment for metallic glasses. We find a similar correlation, with the critical value of μ/B for metallic glasses (0.41–0.43) more sharply defined than for crystalline metals. This critical value applies also for annealing-induced embrittlement of metallic glasses. The clear correlation between mechanical behaviour (plasticity or brittleness) and μ/B assists in understanding flow and fracture mechanisms, and in…
Citation impact
- FWCI
- 126.60
- Percentile
- 100%
- References
- 28
Authors
3Topics & keywords
- Brittleness
- Amorphous metal
- Materials science
- Plasticity
- Embrittlement
- Shear modulus
- Elastic modulus
- Fracture toughness